Buddhism
in Myanmar
A Short History
Roger Bischoff
---o0o---
Contents
Preface
1. Earliest Contacts with Buddhism
2. Buddhism in the Mon and Pyu Kingdoms
3. Theravada Buddhism Comes to Pagan
4. Pagan: Flowering and Decline
5. Shan Rule
6. The Myanmar Build an Empire
7. The Eighteenth and Nineteenth
Centuries
Notes
Bibliography
Preface
Myanmar, or Burma as the
nation has been known throughout history, is one of the major countries
following Theravada Buddhism. In recent years Myanmar has attained special
eminence as the host for the Sixth Buddhist Council, held in Yangon (Rangoon)
between 1954 and 1956, and as the source from which two of the major systems of
Vipassana meditation have emanated out into the greater world: the tradition
springing from the Venerable Mahasi Sayadaw of Thathana Yeiktha and that
springing from Sayagyi U Ba Khin of the International Meditation Centre.
This booklet is intended to
offer a short history of Buddhism in Myanmar from its origins through the
country's loss of independence to Great Britain in the late nineteenth century.
I have not dealt with more recent history as this has already been well
documented. To write an account of the development of a religion in any country
is a delicate and demanding undertaking and one will never be quite satisfied
with the result. This booklet does not pretend to be an academic work shedding
new light on the subject. It is designed, rather, to provide the interested
non-academic reader with a brief overview of the subject.
The booklet has been written
for the Buddhist Publication Society to complete its series of Wheel titles on
the history of the Sasana in the main Theravada Buddhist countries. The
material has been sifted and organised from the point of view of a practising
Buddhist. Inevitably it thus involves some degree of personal interpretation. I
have given importance to sources that would be accorded much less weight in a strictly
academic treatment of the subject, as I feel that in this case the oral
tradition may well be more reliable than modern historians would normally
admit.
One of the objectives of the
narrative is to show that the Buddha's Teaching did not make a lasting
impression on Myanmar immediately upon first arrival. The Sasana had to be
re-introduced or purified again and again from the outside until Myanmar had
matured to the point of becoming one of the main shrines where the Theravada
Buddhist teachings are preserved. The religion did not develop in Myanmar.
Rather, the Myanmar people developed through the religion until the Theravada
faith became embedded in their culture and Pali Buddhism became second nature
to them.
I dedicate this work to my
teachers, Mother Sayamagyi and Sayagyi U Chit Tin.
Roger Bischoff
International Meditation
Centre UK
Splatts House
Heddington, Calne
Wilts SN11 OPE
1. Earliest Contacts with
Buddhism
Myanmar and its Peoples
There are four dominant
ethnic groups in the recorded history of Myanmar: the Mon, the Pyu, the
Myanmar, and the Shan.
Uncertainty surrounds the
origins of the Mon; but it is clear that, at least linguistically, they are
related to the Khmer.[1] What is known is that they settled in the south of
Myanmar and Thailand while the Khmer made northern Thailand, Laos, and Cambodia
their home. These two peoples were probably the first migrants to the region,
apart from Indian merchants who established trading colonies along the coast.
The Mon with their distinct language and culture competed for centuries with
the Myanmar. However, today their influence and language is limited to remote
areas of the south.
The Pyu, like the Myanmar,
are a people of Tibeto-Burman origin with a distinct culture and language. They
lived in the area around Prome long before the Myanmar pushed into the plains
of Myanmar from the north. Their language was closely related to the language
of the Myanmar and was later absorbed by it. Their script was in use until
about the fourteenth century, but was then lost.
The Myanmar people began to
colonise the plains of Myanmar only towards the middle of the first millennium
AD. They came from the mountainous northern regions and may well have originated
in the Central Asian plains.
After the Myanmar, the Shan
flooded in from the North, finally conquering the entire region of Myanmar and
Thailand. The Thai people are descended from Shan tribes. The northeast region
of modern Myanmar is still inhabited predominantly by Shan tribes.
The Region
In the sixth century BC, most
of what we now know as Myanmar, Thailand, Laos, and Cambodia was sparsely
populated. While migrants from the east coast of India had formed trading
colonies along the coast of the Gulf of Martaban, these coastal areas of
Myanmar and Thailand were also home to the Mon. By this time, the Khmer
probably controlled Laos, Cambodia, and northern Thailand, while Upper Myanmar
may already have been occupied to some extent by Myanmar tribes.
As these early settlers did
not use lasting materials for construction, our knowledge of their civilisation
remains scant. We do know, however, that their way of life was very simple --
as it remains today in rural areas -- probably requiring only wooden huts with
palm-leaf roofs for habitation. We can assume that they were not organised into
units larger than village communities and that they did not possess a written
language. Their religion must have been some form of nature worship or animism,
still found today among the more remote tribes of the region.
There were also more highly
developed communities of Indian origin, in the form of trading settlements
located along the entire coast from Bengal to Borneo. In Myanmar, they were
located in Thaton (Suddhammapura), Pegu (Ussa), Yangon (Ukkala, then still on
the coast), and Mrauk-U (Dhannavati) in Arakan; also probably along the
Tenasserim and Arakan coasts. These settlers had mainly migrated from Orissa on
the northeastern coast of the Indian subcontinent, and also from the Deccan in
the southeast. In migrating to these areas, they had also brought their own
culture and religion with them. Initially, the contact between the Hindu
traders and the Mon peasants must have been limited. However, the Indian
settlements, their culture and traditions, were eventually absorbed into the
Mon culture.
G.E. Harvey, in his History
of Burma, relates a Mon legend which refers to the Mon fighting Hindu strangers
who had come back to re-conquer the country that had formerly belonged to
them.[2] This Mon tale confirms the theory that Indian people had formed the
first communities in the region but that these were eventually replaced by the
Mon with the development of their own civilisation. As well as the Indian trading
settlements, there were also some Pyu settlements, particularly in the area of
Prome where a flourishing civilisation later developed.
Also, it is assumed that some
degree of migration from India to the region of Tagaung and Mogok in Upper
Myanmar had taken place through Assam and later through Manipur, but the
"hinterland" was of course much less attractive to traders than the
coastal regions with their easy access by sea. A tradition of Myanmar says that
Tagaung was founded by Abhiraja, a prince of the Sakyans (the tribe of the
Buddha), who had migrated to Upper Myanmar from Nepal in the ninth century BC.
The city was subsequently conquered by the Chinese in approximately 600 BC, and
Pagan and Prome were founded by refugees fleeing southward. In fact, some
historians believe that, like the Myanmar, the Sakyans were a Mongolian rather
than an Indo-Aryan race, and that the Buddha's clansmen were derived from
Mongolian stock.
First Contacts with the
Buddha's Teachings
The source of information for
many of the events related forthwith is the Sasanavamsa.[3] The Sasanavamsa is
a chronicle written in Pali by a bhikkhu,[4] Pannasami, for the Fifth Buddhist
Council held in Mandalay in 1867. As the Sasanavamsa is a recent compilation,
many events mentioned therein may be doubted. However, as it draws on both
written records, some of which are no longer available, and on the oral
tradition of Myanmar, information can be included in this account with the
understanding that it is open to verification.
There are many instances in
the history of Southeast Asian tribes in which a conquering people incorporates
into its own traditions not only the civilisation of the conquered, but also
their clan gods, royal lineage, and thereby their history. This fact would explain
the visits of the Buddha to Thaton and Shwesettaw in the Mon and Myanmar oral
tradition, and the belief of the Arakanese that the Buddha visited their king
and left behind an image of himself for them to worship. Modern historiography
will, of course, dismiss these stories as fabrications made out of national
pride, as the Myanmar had not even arrived in the region at the time of the
Buddha. However, it is possible that the Myanmar and Arakanese integrated into
their own lore the oral historical tradition of their Indian predecessors. This
does not prove that the visits really took place, but it seems a more palatable
explanation of the existence of these accounts than simply putting them down to
historical afterthought of a Buddhist people eager to connect itself with the
origins of their religion.
The Sasanavamsa mentions
several visits of the Buddha to Myanmar and one other important event: the
arrival of the hair relics in Ukkala (Yangon) soon after the Buddha's
enlightenment.
The Arrival of the Hair
Relics
Tapussa and Bhallika, two
merchants from Ukkala,[5] were travelling through the region of Uruvela and
were directed to the Buddha by their family god. The Buddha had just come out
of seven weeks of meditation after his awakening and was sitting under a tree
feeling the need for food. Tapussa and Bhallika made an offering of rice cake
and honey to the Buddha and took the two refuges, the refuge in the Buddha and
the refuge in the Dhamma (the Sangha, the third refuge, did not exist yet). As
they were about to depart, they asked the Buddha for an object to worship in
his stead and he gave them eight hairs from his head. After the two returned
from their journey, they enshrined the three hairs in a stupa which is now the
great Shwedagon Pagoda in Yangon.
It is believed in Myanmar
that the hill upon which the Shwedagon Pagoda stands was not haphazardly chosen
by Tapussa and Bhallika but was, in fact, the site where the three Buddhas
preceding the Buddha Gotama in this world cycle themselves deposited relics.
Buddha Kakusandha is said to have left his staff on the Theinguttara Hill, the
Buddha Konagamana his water filter, and Buddha Kassapa a part of his robe.
Because of this, the Buddha requested Tapussa and Bhallika to enshrine his
relics in this location. Tapussa and Bhallika travelled far and wide in order
to find the hill on which they could balance a tree without its touching the
ground either with the roots or with the crown. Eventually, they found the
exact spot not far from their home in Lower Myanmar where they enshrined the
holy relics in a traditional mound or stupa.[6] The original stupa is said to
have been 27 feet high. Today the Shwedagon pagoda has grown to over 370
feet.
The Buddha's Visits to the
Region
The Myanmar oral tradition
speaks of four visits of the Buddha to the region. While these visits were of
utmost significance in their own right, they are also important in having
established places of pilgrimage up to the present day.
The Visit to Central Myanmar
According to the Sasanavamsa,
the city of Aparanta is situated on the western shore of the Irrawaddy river at
the latitude of Magwe. The Sasanavamsa gives only a very brief summary of the
events surrounding the Buddha's visit to Aparanta, presumably because these
were well known and could be read in the Tipitaka and the commentaries.[7]
Punna, a merchant from
Sunaparanta, went to Savatthi on business and there heard a discourse of the
Buddha.[8] Having won faith in the Buddha and the Teachings, he took ordination
as a bhikkhu. After sometime, he asked the Buddha to teach him a short lesson
so that he could return to Sunaparanta and strive for arahatship. The Buddha
warned him that the people of Sunaparanta were fierce and violent, but Punna
replied that he would not allow anger to arise, even if they should kill him.
In the Punnovada Sutta, the Buddha instructed him not to be enticed by that
which is pleasant, and Punna returned and attained arahatship in his country.
He won over many disciples and built a monastery of red sandalwood for the
Buddha (according to some chronicles of Myanmar, the Buddha made the prediction
that at the location where the red sandalwood monastery was, the great king
Alaungsithu of Pagan would build a shrine). He then sent flowers as an
invitation to the Buddha and the Buddha came accompanied by five hundred
arahats, spent the night in the monastery, and left again before dawn.[9]
Sakka, the king of the
thirty-three devas living in the Tavatimsa plane, provided five hundred palanquins
for the bhikkhus accompanying the Buddha on the journey to Sunaparanta. But
only 499 of the palanquins were occupied. One of them remained empty until the
ascetic Saccabandha, who lived on the Saccabandha mountain in central Myanmar,
joined the Buddha and the 499 bhikkhus accompanying him. On the way to
Sunaparanta, the Buddha stopped in order to teach the ascetic Saccabandha. When
Saccabanda attained arahatship, he then joined the Buddha and completed the
total of 500 bhikkhus who usually travelled with the Master.
On the return journey, the
Buddha stopped at the river Nammada close to the Saccabandha mountain. Here,
the Blessed One was invited by the Naga king, Nammada, to visit and preach to
the Nagas, later accepting food from them. The tradition of Myanmar relates
that he left behind a footprint for veneration near this river, which would
last as long as the Sasana (i.e. 5000 years). Another footprint was left in the
rock of the Saccabandha mountain.[10] These footprints, still visible today, were
worshipped by the Mon, Pyu, and Myanmar kings alike and have remained among the
holiest places of pilgrimage in Myanmar. In the fifteenth century, after the
decimation of the population through the Siamese campaigns, knowledge of the
footprints was lost. Then, in the year 1638, King Thalun sent learned bhikkhus
to the region; fortuitously, they were able to relocate the Buddha's
footprints. Since then Shwesettaw, the place where the footprints are found,
has once again become an important place of pilgrimage in Myanmar. And in the
dry season thousands of devout Buddhists travel there to pay respects.
The Visit to Arakan
In Dhannavati, whose walls
are still partially visible today, the Mahamuni temple is located on the
Sirigutta hill. In this temple, for over two millennia, the Mahamuni image was
enshrined and worshipped. The story of the Mahamuni image, at one time one of
the most revered shrines of Buddhism, is told in the Sappadanapakarana, a work
of a local historian.
Candrasuriya, the king of
Dhannavati, on hearing that a Buddha had arisen in India, desired to go there
to learn the Dhamma. The Buddha, aware of his intention, said to Ananda:
"The king will have to pass through forests dangerous to travellers; wide
rivers will impede his journey; he must cross a sea full of monsters. It will
be an act of charity if we go to his dominion, so that he may pay homage
without risking his life."
So the Buddha went there and
was received with great pomp by King Candrasuriya and his people. The Buddha
then taught the five and eight precepts and instructed the king in the ten
kingly duties, namely, (1) universal beneficence, (2) daily paying homage, (3)
the showing of mercy, (4) taxes of not more than a tenth part of the produce,
(5) justice, (6) punishment without anger, (7) the support of his subjects as
the earth supports them, (8) the employment of prudent commanders, (9) the
taking of good counsel, and (10) the avoidance of pride. The Buddha remained
for a week and on preparing for his departure the king requested that he leave
an image of himself, so that they could worship him even in his absence. The
Buddha consented to this and Sakka the king of the gods himself formed the
image with the metals collected by the king and his people. It was completed in
one week and when the Buddha breathed onto it the people exclaimed that now
there were indeed two Buddhas, so alike was the image to the great sage. Then
the Buddha made a prophesy addressing the image: "I shall pass into
Nibbana in my eightieth year, but you will live for five thousand years which I
have foreseen as the duration of my Teaching."
The Mahamuni image remained
in its original location until 1784 when King Bodawpaya conquered Arakan and
had the image transported to Mandalay where a special shrine, the Arakan
pagoda, was built to enshrine the three-meter image. To have this image in his
capital greatly added to his prestige as a Buddhist king, as it was one of the
most sacred objects in the region. The king himself went out of his city to
meet the approaching image with great devotion and "through the long
colonnades leading to the pagoda, there used to come daily from the Myanmar
palace, so long as a king reigned there, sumptuous offerings borne in stately
procession, marshalled by a minister and shaded by the white
umbrella."[11]
The Missionaries of the Third
Buddhist Council
The Third Buddhist Council
was held in the reign of Emperor Asoka in the year 232 BC in order to purify
the Sangha, to reassert orthodox teaching and to refute heresy. But the work of
the Council did not stop there. With the support of Emperor Asoka, experienced
teachers were sent to border regions in order to spread the teachings of the
Buddha. This dispersal of missionaries is recorded in the Mahavamsa, a Sinhalese
chronicle on the history of Buddhism:
When the thera Moggaliputta,
the illuminator of the religion of the Conqueror, had brought the (third)
council to an end and when, looking into the future, he had beheld the founding
of the religion in adjacent countries, then in the month of Katthika he sent
forth theras, one here and one there. The thera Majjhantika he sent to Kasmira
and Gandhara, the thera Mahadeva he sent to Mahisamandala. To Vanavasa he sent
the thera named Rakkhita, and to Aparantaka the Yona named Dhammarakkhita; to
Maharattha he sent the thera named Mahadhammarakkhita, but the thera
Maharakkhita he sent into the country of the Yona. He sent the thera Majjhima
to the Himalaya country and together with the thera Uttara, the thera Sona of
wondrous might went to Suvannabhumi....[12]
According to the Sasanavamsa,
the above mentioned regions are the following: Kasmira and Gandhara is the
right bank of the Indus river south of Kabul; Mahisamandala is Andhra; Vanavasa
is the region around Prome; Aparantaka is west of the upper Irrawaddy;
Maharattha is Thailand; Yona, the country of the Shan tribes; and Suvannabhumi
is Thaton. The Sasanavamsa mentions five places in Southeast Asia where Asoka's
missionaries taught the Buddha's doctrine, and through their teaching many
gained insight and took refuge in the Triple Gem. There are two interesting
features mentioned in the text. First, in order to ordain nuns, bhikkhunis,
other bhikkhunis had to be present, and secondly, the Brahmajala Sutta was
preached in Thaton.
The Sasanavamsa goes on to
describe sixty thousand women ordaining in Aparanta. It states that women could
not have been ordained without the presence of bhikkhunis, as in Sri Lanka
where women could only be ordained after Mahinda's sister Sanghamitta had
followed her brother there. In this case, the author surmises that bhikkhunis
must have followed Dhammarakkhita to Aparanta at a later stage.
The Brahmajala Sutta, which
the arahats Sona and Uttara preached in Thaton, deals in detail with the different
schools of philosophical and religious thought prevalent in India at the time
of the Buddha. The fact that Sona and Uttara chose this Sutta to convert the
inhabitants of Suvannabhumi indicates that they were facing a well-informed
public, familiar with the views of Brahmanism that were refuted by the Buddha
in this discourse. There can be no doubt that only Indian colonisers, not the
Mon, would have been able to follow an analysis of Indian philosophy as
profound as the Brahmajala Sutta.
2. Buddhism in the Mon and
Pyu Kingdoms
While there is no conclusive
archaeological proof that Buddhism continued to be practised in southern
Myanmar after the missions of the Third Council, the Sasanavamsa refers to an
unbroken lineage of teachers passing on the Dhamma to their disciples.
The Mon
In a third century AD
inscription by a South Indian king in Nagarjunakonda, the land of the Cilatas
is mentioned in a list of countries visited by a group of bhikkhus. Historians
believe the Cilatas or Kiratas (also mentioned by Ptolemy and in Sanskrit
literature) to be identical to the Mon populations of Lower Myanmar.
The inscription states that
the bhikkhus sent to the Cilata country converted the population there to
Buddhism. In the same inscription, missions to other countries such as Sri
Lanka are mentioned. It is generally believed that most of these countries had
received earlier Buddhist missionaries sent by Buddhist kings, but as
civilisation in these lands was relatively undeveloped, teachings as profound
as the Buddha's had probably become distorted by local religions or possibly
been completely lost. It is possible that these missions did not so much
re-establish Buddhism, but rather purify the type of Buddhism practised there.
Southern India was then the guardian of the Theravada faith and obviously
remained in contact with countries that had been converted in earlier times but
were unable to preserve the purity of the religion.
As has been already
mentioned, the first datable archaeological finds of the Mon civilisation stem
from the Mon kingdom of Dvaravati in the South of Thailand. They consist of a
Roman oil lamp and a bronze statue of the Buddha which are believed to be no
later than the first or second century AD. In discussing the Mon Theravada
Buddhist civilisation, we cannot remain in Myanmar only. For only by studying
the entire sphere of influence of the Mon in this period, can a comprehensive
picture be constructed. This sphere includes large parts of present day
Thailand. In fact, the Chinese Buddhist pilgrim, Yuan Chwang, who travelled to
India in about 630 AD, describes a single Mon country stretching from Prome to
Chenla in the east and including the Irrawaddy and Sittang deltas. He calls the
country Dvaravati, but the annals of the court of China of the same period
mention Dvaravati as a vassal of Thaton. We can, therefore, safely conclude
that the Mon of the region formed a fairly homogenous group in which the
distribution of power was obviously not always evident to the outsider.
The Pyu
Lower Myanmar was also
inhabited by another ethnic group, the Pyu, who were probably closely related
to the modern Myanmar. They had their capital at Sri Ksetra (near modern day
Prome) and were also followers of the Theravada Buddhist faith. Chinese travellers'
reports of the mid-third century AD refer to the kingdom of Lin-Yang where
Buddha was venerated by all and where several thousand monks or bhikkhus lived.
As Lin-Yang was to the west of Kamboja[13] and could not be reached by sea, we
can infer that the Chinese travellers must have been referring to the ancient
kingdom of Prome. This is all the more likely as archaeological finds prove
that only about one century later Pali Buddhist texts, including Abhidhamma
texts, were studied by the Pyu.
The earliest highly developed
urban settlement of the Pyu was Beikthano, near Prome. However, its importance
dwindled towards the sixth century, when Sri Ksetra became the centre of Pyu
civilisation. A major monastery built in the fourth century has been unearthed
at Beikthano. The building, constructed in brick, with a stupa and shrine
located nearby, is identical to the Buddhist monasteries of Nagarjunakonda, the
great Buddhist centre of southern India. It is situated near a stupa and a
shrine, a design which is identical to the one used in South India. Bricks had
been used by the Pyus since the second century AD for the construction of
pillared halls, which formed the temples of their original religion.
Interestingly, the Pyu bricks have always been of the exact dimensions as those
used at the time of Emperor Asoka in India. But the brick laying techniques
used in the monastery in Beikthano were far inferior to the ones used in their
southern Indian counterparts.
For such a major edifice as
the monastery at Beikthano to have been constructed, the religion must have
been well established at least among the ruling class. How long it took for
Buddhism to become influential in Pyu society is difficult to determine, but
some historians assume that the first contacts with Asokan religious centres in
India took place in the second century AD. This would allow for a period of
development of two hundred years until the first important shrine was built.
Despite the Indian architectural influence, the inferior brick laying
techniques found in Beikthano indicate that indigenous architects and artisans,
rather than imported craftsmen or Indian colonisers, were employed in the
construction of monasteries and other important buildings.
It should, of course, not be
forgotten that the Pyu possessed an architecture of their own and a highly
developed urban culture that had evolved quite independently of Indian
influences. Theravada Buddhism found a fertile ground in this highly developed civilisation.
It is probable that the Pyu civilisation was more advanced than that of the
Mon. The Pyu sites found around Prome are the earliest urban sites in Southeast
Asia found to date. The urban developments and datable monuments in Thailand
and Cambodia are only from the seventh century. Older artifacts may have been
found in Thailand, but they were not products of indigenous people and do not
prove the existence of a developed civilisation.
The information we have of
the state of the religion in the Mon and Pyu societies during the first four
centuries AD is very limited. However, by the fifth century, with the
development of religious activity in the region, information becomes more
substantive. The historical tradition of Myanmar gives the credit for this
religious resurgence to a well-known Buddhist scholar, Acariya
Buddhaghosa.
Buddhaghosa and Myanmar
Acariya Buddhaghosa was the
greatest commentator on the Pali Buddhist texts, whose Visuddhimagga and
commentaries to the canon are regarded as authoritative by Theravada scholars.
The chronicles of Myanmar firmly maintain that Buddhaghosa was of Mon origin
and a native of Thaton. They state that his return from Sri Lanka, with the
Pali scriptures, the commentaries, and grammatical works, gave a fresh impetus
to the religion.
However, modern historians do
not accept that Buddhaghosa was from Myanmar while some even doubt his
existence.[14] Despite this contention, Eliot, in his Hinduism and Buddhism,
gives more weight to circumstantial evidence and writes:
The Burmese tradition that
Buddhaghosa was a native of Thaton and returned thither from Sri Lanka merits
more attention than it has received. It can easily be explained away as
patriotic fancy. On the other hand, if Buddhaghosa's object was to invigorate
Hinayanism in India the result of his really stupendous labours was singularly
small, for in India his name is connected with no religious movement. But if we
suppose that he went to Sri Lanka by way of the holy places in Magadha [now
Bihar] and returned from the Coromandal coast [Madras] to Burma where
Hinayanism afterwards flourished, we have at least a coherent
narrative.[15]
The Sinhalese chronicles,
especially the Mahavamsa, place Buddhaghosa in the first half of the fifth
century. Although he spent most of his active working life in Sri Lanka, he is
also credited with imbuing new life into Theravada Buddhism in South India, and
developing such important centres as Kancipura and Uragapuram that were closely
connected with Prome and Thaton. Proof of this connection can be found in
archeological finds in the environs of Prome which include Pali literature
inscribed in the Kadambe script on gold and stone plates. This script was used
in the fifth and sixth century in southern India.
All in all, Myanmar has a
valid case for claiming some connection with Buddhaghosa. It is, of course,
impossible to prove that he was born there or even visited there, but his
influence undoubtedly led to great religious activity in the kingdoms of Lower
Myanmar.
Buddhism in Lower Myanmar:
5th to 11th Centuries
From the fifth century until
the conquest of Lower Myanmar by Pagan, there is a continuous record of
Buddhism flourishing in the Mon and Pyu kingdoms. The Mon kingdoms are
mentioned in travel reports of several Chinese Buddhist pilgrims and also in
the annals of the Chinese court. In the fifth century, Thaton and Pegu (Pago)
are mentioned in the Buddhist commentarial literature for the first time.[16]
They were now firmly established on the map as Buddhist centres of learning.
Despite this, Buddhism was not without rivals in the region. This is shown, by
the following event some chronicles of Myanmar mention.
A king of Pago, Tissa by
name, had abandoned the worship of the Buddha and instead practised Brahmanical
worship. He persecuted the Buddhists and destroyed Buddha images or cast them
into ditches. A pious Buddhist girl, the daughter of a merchant, restored the
images, then washed and worshipped them. The king could not tolerate such
defiance, of course, and had the girl dragged before him. He tried to have her
executed in several ways, but she seemed impossible to kill. Elephants would
not trample her,while the fire of her pyre would not burn her. Eventually the
king, intrigued by these events, asked the girl to perform a miracle. He stated
that, if she was able to make a Buddha image produce seven new images and then
make all eight statues fly into heaven, she would be set free. The girl spoke
an act of truth, and the eight Buddha statues flew up into the sky. The king
was then converted to Buddhism and elevated the girl to the position of chief
queen.
Until now, archaeological
finds of Mon ruins in Myanmar are meagre, but at P'ong Tuk, in southern
Thailand,[17] a Mon city, dating from the second half of the first millennium
AD, has been unearthed. Here, excavations have revealed the foundations of
several buildings. One contained the remains of a platform and fragments of
columns similar to the Buddhist vihara at Anuradhapura in Sri Lanka; another,
with a square foundation of round stones, seems to have been a stupa. Statues
of Indian origin from the Gupta period (320-600 AD) were also found at the
site. The Theravada Buddhist culture of the Mon flourished in both Dvaravati
and Thaton. However, the Mon civilisation in Thailand did not survive the
onslaught of the Khmer in the eleventh century who were worshipping Hindu gods.
In Myanmar, the Mon kingdom was conquered by Pagan. The Myanmar were eager to
accept the Mon culture and especially their religion, while the Khmer, as
Hindus, at best tolerated it.
The Pyu culture of this
period is well documented because of archaeological finds at Muanggan, a small
village close to the ancient ruins of Hmawza. There two perfectly preserved
inscribed gold plates were found. These inscriptions reveal three texts: the
verses spoken by Assaji to Sariputta (ye dhamma hetuppabhava...), a list of
categories of the Abhidhamma (cattaro iddhipada, cattaro samappadhana...), and
the formula of worship of Buddha, Dhamma, and Sangha (iti pi so bhagava...). At
the same site, a book with twenty leaves of gold protected with golden covers,
was discovered. It contained texts such as the paticca-samuppada (dependent
origination), the vipassana-nanas (stages of insight knowledge), and various
other excerpts from the Abhidhamma and the other two baskets of the Buddhist
scriptures. The scripts in all these documents are identical to scripts used in
parts of southern India, and can be dated from the third to the sixth century
AD.
In addition to these golden
plates, a number of sculptures and reliefs were found in Hmawza. They depict
either the Buddha or scenes from his life, for example, the birth of the Buddha
and the taming of the wild elephant Nalagiri. The sculpture is similar in style
to that of Amaravati, a centre of Buddhist learning in South India. There were
also unearthed remains of Brahman temples and sites of Mahayana worship of east
Indian origin; hence it would appear that several faiths, of which the
Theravada was the strongest, co-existed in Sri Ksetra, the then capital of the
Pyu. The script used by the Pyu is indicative of major links with Buddhist
kingdoms in South India rather than with Sri Lanka. And it can be surmised that
the bhikkhus of the Deccan and other regions of southern India were the
teachers of both the Mon and the Pyu in religious matters as well as in the
arts and sciences.
The inscriptions show how
highly developed scholarship of the Pali Buddhist texts must have been in Lower
Myanmar even in these early days. Learning had gone well beyond the basics into
the world of Abhidhamma studies. Pali was obviously well known as a language of
learning, but unfortunately no original texts composed in Sri Ksetra or Thaton
have come down to us. Interestingly, some of the texts inscribed on these gold
plates are not identical to the same canonical texts as they are known today.
Therefore, the Tipitaka known to the Pyu must have been replaced by a version
preserved in a country that had no close contact with the Pyu. This could well
have been Sri Lanka, as this country came to play an important role in the
history of Buddhism in Myanmar through the friendship between the conqueror of
Lower Myanmar, Anawratha, and the king who drove the Hindus from Sri Lanka,
Vijayabahu.
The finds on the site of the
ancient Pyu capital confirm the reports of the Chinese pilgrims and also the
Tang imperial chronicles of China which state: "They (the Pyu) dislike
taking life. They know how to make astronomical calculations. They are Buddhists
and have a hundred monasteries, with brick of glass embellished with gold and
silver vermilion, gay colours and red kino.... At seven years of age the people
cut their hair and enter a monastery; if at the age of twenty they have not
grasped the doctrine they return to the lay state."[18]
Both Buddhist cultures in the
south of Myanmar, the Mon and the Pyu, were swept away in the eleventh century
by armies of the Myanmar who had found a unifying force in their leader, the
founder of Pagan and champion of Buddhism, Anawratha.
3. Theravada Buddhism Comes
to Pagan
The Beginnings of Pagan
Pagan is believed to have
been founded in the years 849-850 AD, by the Myanmar, who had already
established themselves as rice growers in the region around Kyauksai near
Mandalay. Anawratha began to unite the region by subjugating one chieftain
after another and was successful in giving the Myanmar a sense of belonging to
a larger community, a nation. The crucial event in the history of Myanmar is
not so much the founding of the city of Pagan and the building of its walls and
moat, but more Pagan's acceptance of Theravada Buddhism in the eleventh
century. The religion was brought to the Myanmar by a Mon bhikkhu named Shin
Arahan.
The religion prevailing among
the Myanmar before and during the early reign of Anawratha was some form of
Mahayana Buddhism, which had probably found its way into the region from the
Pala kingdom in Bengal. This is apparent from bronze statues depicting
Bodhisattas and especially the "Lokanatha," a Bodhisatta believed, in
Bengal, to reign in the period between the demise of the Buddha Gotama and the
advent of the Buddha Metteyya. Anawratha continued to cast terracotta votive
tablets with the image of Lokanatha even after he embraced the Theravada doctrine.[19]
In India, Buddhism had split
into numerous schools, some of which differed fundamentally from the teachings
of Pali Buddhism, which is also called Theravada Buddhism (the doctrine of the
Theras). The Ari, the monks or priests of this Mahayana Buddhist form of
worship, are described, in later chronicles of Myanmar, as the most shameless
bogus ascetics imaginable. They are said to have sold absolution from sin and
to have oppressed the people in various ways with their tyranny. Their tantric
Buddhism included, as an important element, the worship of Nagas (dragons),
which was probably an ancient indigenous tradition.
At this time, the beginning
of the eleventh century, the Buddhist religion among the Mon in Suvannabhumi
was on the decline as people were disturbed by robbers and raiders, by plagues,
and by adversaries of the religion. These most probably came from the Hindu
Khmer kingdom in Cambodia and the north of Thailand. The Khmer were
endeavouring to add Thaton and the other Mon kingdoms of the south to their
expanding empire. Shin Arahan must have feared that bhikkhus would not be able
to continue to maintain their religious practice and the study of the
scriptures under these circumstances. He went, therefore, upcountry where a
new, strong people were developing, prosperous and secure from enemies.
It is interesting to note
that in this same period, Buddhism was under attack in other places as well.
The Colas, a Hindu dynasty strongly opposed to Buddhism, arose in southern
India, one of the last strongholds of Theravada Buddhism. They were able to
expand their rule to include most of Sri Lanka between 1017 and 1070. The great
Mon city, Dvaravati, a Theravada centre in southern Thailand, fell to the
Khmer, the masters of the whole of Thailand, who were Shaivaite Hindus. In the
north of India, Muslim armies were trying to destroy what little was left of
Buddhism there. "In this perilous period," writes Professor Luce,
"Buddhism was saved only by such valiant fighters as Vijayabahu in Sri Lanka
and Anawratha."[20]
Shin Arahan Converts the King
Shin Arahan arrived in the
vicinity of Pagan and was discovered in his forest dwelling by a hunter. The
hunter, who had never before seen such a strange creature with a shaven head
and a yellow robe, thought he was some kind of spirit and took him to the king,
Anawratha. Shin Arahan naturally sat down on the throne, as it was the highest
seat, and the king thought: "This man is peaceful, in this man there is
the essential thing. He is sitting down on the best seat, surely he must be the
best being." The king asked the visitor to tell him where he came from and
was told that he came from the place where the Order lived and that the Buddha
was his teacher. Then Shin Arahan gave the king the teaching on mindfulness
(appamada), teaching him the same doctrine Nigrodha had given Emperor Asoka
when he was converted. Shin Arahan then told the monarch that the Buddha had
passed into Parinibbana, but that his teaching, the Dhamma, enshrined in the
Tipitaka, and the twofold Sangha consisting of those who possessed absolute
knowledge and those who possessed conventional knowledge, remained.
The king must have felt that
he had found what had been missing in his life and a genuine alternative to the
superficial teachings of the Ari monks. He built a monastery for Shin Arahan,
and according to some sources, stopped all worship of the Ari monks. Tradition
has it that he had them dressed in white and even forced them to serve as
soldiers in his army. The Ari tradition continued for a long time, however, and
its condemnation is a feature of much later times, and not, as far as
contemporary evidence shows, of the Pagan era.
The Sasanavamsa gives an
alternate version of Anawratha's conversion according to which Shin Arahan had
originally come from Sri Lanka to study the Dhamma in Dvaravati and Thaton and
was on his way to Sri Ksetra in search of a text when he was taken to Anawratha
by a hunter. The king asked him, "Who are you?" -- "O King, I am
a disciple of Gotama." -- "Of what kind are the Three Jewels?"
-- "O King, the Buddha should be regarded as Mahosadha the wise, his
doctrine as Ummagga, his order as the Videhan army."[21]
This version is interesting
in that Anawratha is portrayed as being a Buddhist with knowledge of Jataka
stories, such as the Mahosadha Jataka referred to above, even before meeting
Shin Arahan. This assumption that he was no stranger to Buddhism is supported
by the fact that earlier kings had been followers of Buddhism in varying
degrees. Caw Rahan, who died about 94 years before Anawratha's accession, is
said to have built a Sima and five Pagodas, and Kyaung Pyu Min built the white
monastery outside Pagan. Kyaung Pyu Min is believed to have been Anawratha's
father.
Anawratha Acquires the
Scriptures
Through Shin Arahan,
Anawratha had now found the religion he had been yearning for and he decided to
set out and procure the scriptures and holy relics of this religion. For he
wished his kingdom to be secured on the original teachings of the Buddha. He
tried to find the scriptures and relics of his new religion in different
quarters. In his enthusiasm he did not limit his quest to Thaton, but also searched
among the Khmer in Angkor, and in Tali, the capital of the Nanchao, a kingdom
in modern day Yunnan, in China, where a tooth of the Buddha was enshrined. But
everywhere he was refused. He then went to Thaton, where his teacher Shin
Arahan had come from, to request a copy of the scriptures. According to the
tradition of Myanmar, Anawratha's request was refused, and unable to endure
another refusal he set out with his army in the year 1057 to conquer Thaton and
acquire the Tipitaka by force. Before conquering Thaton, however, he had to
subjugate Sri Ksetra, the Pyu capital. From there, he took the relics enshrined
in King Dwattabaung's Bawbaw-gyi Pagoda to Pagan.
Some think that the aim of
his campaign was mainly to add the prosperous Indian colonies of Lower Myanmar
to his possessions, while others think he may have actually been called to
Thaton to defend it against the marauding Khmer. Whatever the immediate cause
of his campaign in the lower country, we know for certain that he returned with
the king of Thaton and his court, with Mon artists and scholars and, above all,
with Thaton's bhikkhus and their holy books, the Tipitaka. Suvannabhumi and its
Mon population were now in the hands of the Myanmar and the Mon culture and
religion were accepted and assimilated in the emergent Pagan with
fervour.
Initially the fervour must
have been restricted to the king and possibly his immediate entourage, yet even
they continued to propitiate their traditional gods for worldly gain as the new
religion was considered a higher practice. Theravada Buddhism does not provide
much in the way of rites and rituals, but a royal court cannot do without them.
So the traditional propitiation of the Nagas continued to be used for court
ceremonials and remained part of the popular religion, while the bhikkhus were
accorded the greatest respect and their master, the Buddha Gotama, was honoured
with the erection of pagodas and shrines.
There were contacts between
the new kings of Myanmar and Sri Lanka that are recorded not only in the
chronicles of the two countries but also in stone inscriptions in South
India.[22] As the Hindu Colas had ruled Sri Lanka for more than half a century,
Buddhism had been weakened and King Vijayabahu, who had driven out the
Vaishnavite Colas, wanted to re-establish his religion. So in 1070, he
requested King Anawratha of Myanmar, who had assisted him financially in his
war against the Colas, to send bhikkhus to re-introduce the pure ordination
into his country.[23] It is interesting to note that the Culavamsa refers to
Anawratha as the king of Ramanna, which was Lower Myanmar, also called
Suvannabhumi. He was approached as the conqueror and master of Thaton, a
respected Theravada centre, rather than as the king of Pagan, a new and unknown
country. The bhikkhus who travelled to Sri Lanka brought the Sinhalese Tipitaka
back with them and established a link between the two countries which was to
last for centuries.
Anawratha is mentioned in the
Myanmar, Mon, Khmer, Thai, and Sinhalese chronicles as a great champion of
Buddhism because he developed Pagan into a major regional power and laid the
foundation for its glory. He did not, however, build many of the temples for
which Pagan is now so famous as the great age of temple building started only
after his reign. It is important to realize that his interest was not
restricted only to Pagan. He built pagodas wherever his campaigns took him and
adorned them with illustrations from the Jatakas and the life of the Buddha.
Some maintain that he used only Jatakas as themes for the adornment of his
religious buildings because that was all he possessed of the Tipitaka. Such a
conclusion is negative and quite superficial. After all, during Asoka's time
Jatakas and scenes from the life of the Buddha were used for illustrations in
Bharut and Sanchi, the great stupas near Bombay. We cannot therefore deduce
that the builders of Bharut and Sanchi were acquainted only with the Jatakas.
These edifying stories which teach the fundamentals of Buddhism so skilfully
are singularly suited to educate an illiterate people beset by superstitions
through the vivid visual means of the stone reliefs depicting these stories. It
is almost unthinkable that the Mon Sangha, who taught Anawratha, had no
knowledge of at least all of the Vinaya. Otherwise, they would not have been
able to re-establish a valid ordination of bhikkhus in Sri Lanka.
Anawratha left behind
innumerable clay tablets adorned with images of the Buddha, the king's name,
and some Pali and Sanskrit verses. A typical aspiration on these tablets was:
"By me, King Anawratha, this mould of Sugata (Buddha) has been made.
Through this may I obtain the path to Nibbana when Metteyya is awakened."
Anawratha aspired to become a disciple of the Buddha Metteyya, unlike many
later kings of Myanmar who aspired to Buddhahood. Is this an indication that
this warrior had remained a modest man in spite of his empire building?
4. Pagan: Flowering and
Decline
Anawratha was succeeded by a
number of kings of varying significance to Buddhism in Myanmar. His successors
inherited a relatively stable and prosperous kingdom and consequently were able
to embark on the huge temple building projects for which their reigns are still
remembered.
This is the time when kings
such as Kyanzitta and others built pagodas, libraries, monasteries, and
ordination halls. These kings must have possessed coffers full of riches
collected from their extensive kingdom which they lavished on the religion of
the Buddha. Their palaces were probably built of wood as was the last palace of
the Myanmar dynasty. Though the palaces must have reflected the wealth and
power of the rulers, the more durable brick was not deemed necessary for such
worldly buildings. This is similar to views still found in rural areas of
Myanmar today. The only structure adorned to any extent in a village is the
monastery and the buildings attached to it, such as the rest house. The
villagers are very modest with regard to their private houses and even consider
it improper to decorate them. Their monastery, however, is given every
decoration affordable.
Kyanzitta Strengthens
Theravada Buddhism
Kyanzitta (1084-1113), who
had been Anawratha's commander-in-chief and had succeeded Anawratha's son to
the throne, consolidated Theravada Buddhism's predominance in Pagan. In his
reign, such important shrines as the Shwezigon Pagoda, the Nanda, Nagayon, and
Myinkaba Kubyauk-gyi temples were built.
With the three latter
temples, Kyanzitta introduced a new style of religious building. The
traditional stupa or dagoba found in India and Sri Lanka is a solid mound in
which relics or other holy objects are enshrined. The area of worship is
situated around them and is usually marked by ornate stone railings. In the new
style of building, however, the solid mound had been hollowed out and could be
entered. The central shrine was surrounded by halls which housed stone reliefs
depicting scenes from the Buddha's life and Jataka stories. Kyanzitta's aim was
the conversion of his people to the new faith. Whereas Anawratha had been busy
expanding his empire and bringing relics and the holy scriptures to Pagan,
Kyanzitta's mission was to consolidate this enterprise. Enormous religious
structures such as the Nanda Temple attracted the populace and the interiors of
the temples allowed the bhikkhus to instruct the inquisitive in the king's
faith.
Professor Luce writes:
The Nanda (temple) ... he
built with four broad halls. Each hall had the same 16 scenes in stone relief
all identically arranged. The bhikkhus could cope with four audiences
simultaneously. The scenes cover the whole life of the Buddha. When well
grounded in these, the audience would pass to the outer wall of the corridor.
Here, running around the whole corridor are the 80 scenes of Gotama's life up
to the Enlightenment. The later life of the Buddha is shown in hundreds of
other stone reliefs on the inner walls and shrines.[24]
Kyanzitta's efforts for the
advancement of Buddhism were not limited to his own country. For in one of his
many inscriptions, he also mentions that he sent craftsmen to Bodhgaya to
repair the Mahabodhi temple, which had been destroyed by a foreign king. The
upkeep of the Mahabodhi temple became a tradition with the kings of Myanmar,
who continued to send missions to Bodhgaya to repair the temple and also to
donate temple slaves and land to the holiest shrine of Buddhism.[25]
Kyanzitta also initiated an
extensive review and purification of the Tipitaka by the bhikkhus. This was the
first occasion in Myanmar's history when the task of a Buddhist Sangayana or
Synod, comparing the Sinhalese and Suvannabhumi's Tipitaka, was undertaken. It
is possible and even probable that this huge editing work was carried out along
with visiting Sinhalese bhikkhus.
By nature of Myanmar's
geographical position, external influences swept in predominantly from northern
India, and therefore tantric Buddhism, dominant especially in Bengal, remained
strong. However, Kyanzitta succeeded in firmly establishing the Pali Tipitaka
by asking the bhikkhus to compare the ancient Mon Tipitaka with the texts
obtained from the Mahavihara in Sri Lanka. In this way, he also made it clear
that confirmation of orthodoxy was to be sought in Sri Lanka and not in any
other Buddhist country. Though Mahayana practices were tolerated in his reign
(his chief queen was a tantric Buddhist), they were not officially regarded as
the pure religion. It is characteristic of Pagan that these two branches of
Buddhism co-existed -- the religion of the Theras, which was accepted as the
highest religion -- and the tantric practices, which included the worship of
spirits or nats and gave more immediate satisfaction. Pagodas are often adorned
with figures of all types of deities, but the deities are normally shown in an
attitude of reverence towards the pagoda, a symbol of the Buddha. The ancient
gods were not banished, but had to submit to the peerless Buddha. Tradition
attributes to King Anawratha the observation: "Men will not come for the
sake of the new faith. Let them come for their old gods, and gradually they
will be won over."
An approach such as this,
whether it was Anawratha's or Kyanzitta's, would suggest that the practice of
the old religion of the Ari monks was allowed to continue and that the
conversion of the country was gentle and peaceful as befits the religion of the
Buddha. Although later Myanmar chronicles refer to the Ari monks as a debased
group of charlatans who were totally rooted out by Anawratha, this is far from
the truth. A powerful movement of "priests" who incorporated magic
practices in their teachings continued to exist throughout the Pagan period,
and though they may have respected the basic rules of the Vinaya and donned the
yellow robe, their support was rooted in the old animistic beliefs of the
Myanmar.[26] It should not be forgotten that the Myanmar first started to
settle in the area of Kyauksai in the sixth century AD and that the "man
in the field" was in no way ready for such highly developed a religion as
Theravada Buddhism. The transition had to be gradual, and the process that
started remains still incomplete in the minds of many people, especially in the
more remote areas of the hill country.
The example of Kyanzitta's
son Rajakumar, however, shows how even in those early days the teachings of the
Buddha were understood and practised not only by the bhikkhus, but also by lay
people and members of the royal court. Rajakumar's conduct is proof of his
father's ability to establish men in the Dhamma and survives as a monument just
as the Ananda temple does.
Rajakumar was Kyanzitta's
only son and his rightful heir. Due to political misadventures Kyanzitta was
separated from his wife and therefore not aware of the birth of his son for
seven years. When his daughter gave birth to his grandson he anointed him as future
king immediately after his birth. Rajakumar grew up in the shadow of his
nephew, the crown prince, but neither during his father's reign nor after his
death did he ever try to usurp the throne through intrigue or by force. He was
a minister zealous in the affairs of state, prudent and wise. He was also a
scholar of the Tipitaka and instrumental in its review, vigorously supporting
his father in his objective to establish Buddhism. But he is best known for his
devotion to his father in his last years when his health was failing. In order
to restore the king's health he built five pagodas which to this day are called
Min-o-Chanda, "The Welfare of the Old King." When the king was on his
deathbed:
Rajakumar, remembering the
many and great favours with which the king had nourished him, made a beautiful
golden image of the Buddha and entering with ceremony presented it to the king,
saying: "This golden Buddha I have made to help my lord. The three
villages of slaves you gave me, I give to this Buddha." And the king
rejoiced and said "Sadhu, sadhu, sadhu." Then in the presence of the
compassionate Mahathera and other leading bhikkhus, the king poured on the
ground the water of dedication, calling the earth to witness. Then Rajakumar
enshrined the golden image, and built around it a cave temple with a golden
pinnacle.[27]
Later Kings
Rajakumar's nephew was King
Alaungsithu (c.1113-67), who continued the tradition of his dynasty of
glorifying the Buddha's religion by building a vast temple, the Sabbannu Temple,
probably the largest monument in Pagan. During his many travels and campaigns,
he built pagodas and temples throughout Myanmar. The faith that Shin Arahan had
inspired in Anawratha and his successors continued to inspire Alaungsithu. Shin
Arahan, who had seen kings come and go and the flowering of the religion he
brought to Pagan, is believed to have died during the reign of King
Alaungsithu, in about 1115.
After the death of
Alaungsithu, Pagan was thrown into turmoil by violent struggles for the throne.
Several kings reigned for short periods and spent most of their time and
resources in power struggles. One even succeeded in alienating the great king
of Sri Lanka, Parakramabahu, by mistreating his emissaries and breaking the
agreements between the two countries. Eventually Parakramabahu invaded Myanmar,
devastating towns and villages and killing the king. The new king, Narapati
(1174-1210), blessed the country with a period of peace and prosperity. This
conducive atmosphere was to allow outstanding scholarship and learning to arise
in Pagan.
Kyawswa (1234-50) was a king
under whom scholarship was encouraged even more, undoubtedly because the king
himself spent most of his time in scholarly pursuits including memorising
passages of the Tipitaka. He had relinquished most of his worldly duties to his
son in order to dedicate more time to the study of the scriptures. Two
grammatical works, the Saddabindu and the Paramatthabindu, are ascribed to him.
It would appear that his palace was a place of great culture and learning as
his ministers and his daughter are credited with scholarly works as well.
During the twelfth century, a
sect of forest dwellers also thrived. They were called arannaka in Pali and
were identical with the previously mentioned Ari of the later chroniclers of
Myanmar.[28] This was a monastic movement that only used the yellow robes and
the respect due to them in order to follow their own ideas. They indulged in
business transactions and owned vast stretches of land. They gave feasts and
indulged in the consumption of liquor, and, though they pretended to be
practising the teachings of the Buddha, their practices were probably of a
tantric nature. It would appear that they had a considerable amount of
influence at the royal court and one of the main exponents of the movement was
even given the title of royal teacher. Superstition and magic were gaining
dominance once again and Anawratha's and Kyanzitta's empire was slowly sliding
into decadence.
The last king of Pagan,
Narathihapate, whom the Myanmar know by the name Tayoupyemin[29] (the king who
fled the Chinese), repeatedly refused to pay symbolic tribute to the Mongol
emperors in Peking who in 1271 had conquered neighbouring Yunnan. He even went
so far as to execute ambassadors of the Chinese emperor and their retinue for
their lack of deference to the king. He became so bold and blinded by ignorance
that he attacked a vassal state of the Mongols. The emperor in Peking was
finally forced to send a punitive expedition which defeated the Pagan army
north of Pagan. The news of this defeat caused the king and his court to flee
to Pathein (Bassein). As the imperial court in Peking was not interested in
adding Pagan to its possessions, the Yunnan expedition did not remain in the
environs. When the king was later murdered and the whole empire fell into
disarray, the Yunnani generals returned, looting Pagan. The territories were
divided amongst Shan chiefs who paid tribute to the Mongols.
G.E. Harvey honours the kings
of Pagan with the following words:
To them the world owes to a
great measure the preservation of Theravada Buddhism, one of the purest faiths
mankind has ever known. Brahmanism had strangled it in its land of birth; in
Sri Lanka its existence was threatened again and again; east of Burma it was
not yet free from priestly corruptions; but the kings of Burma never wavered,
and at Pagan the stricken faith found a city of refuge.[30]
Contacts with Sri Lanka and
the First Controversies
The contact with Sri Lanka
was very important for the growth of the religion in Pagan. As was shown
previously, it started with the friendship of Anawratha and Vijayabahu, both of
whom fought for Buddhism: Anawratha to establish a new kingdom, Vijayabahu to
wrench an old one from the clutches of the Hindu invaders. They supported each
other in their struggles and then together re-established the Theravada
doctrine in their respective countries, Anawratha sending bhikkhus to Sri Lanka
to revive the Sangha, while Vijayabahu reciprocated by sending the sacred
texts. The continued contact between the two countries was beneficial to both:
many a reform movement, purifying the religion in one country spread to the
other as well. Bhikkhus visiting from one country were led to look at their own
traditions critically and to reappraise their practice of the Dhamma as
preserved in the Pali texts. After the fall of the main Buddhist centres in
southern India, centres which had been the main allies of the Mon Theravadins
in the south, Sri Lanka was the only ally in the struggle for the survival of
the Theravada tradition.
Leading bhikkhus of Pagan
undertook the long and difficult journey to Sri Lanka in order to visit the
holy temples and study the scriptures as they had been preserved by the
Sinhalese Sangha. Shin Arahan's successor as the king's teacher left the royal
court for Sri Lanka, returning to Pagan only to die. He was succeeded by a Mon
bhikkhu, Uttarajiva, who led a pilgrimage to Sri Lanka in 1171. This was to
cause the first upheaval in the Sangha of Pagan.
Uttarajiva travelled to Sri
Lanka accompanied by Chapada, a novice who remained behind on the island in
order to study the scriptures in the Mahavihara, the orthodox monastery of Sri
Lanka and the guardian of the Theravada tradition. After ten years, he returned
to Pagan accompanied by four elders who had studied with him. The Kalyani
inscription, written about three hundred years later, relates that Chapada
considered the tradition of the Myanmar bhikkhus impure. He had consequently
taken four bhikkhus with him because he needed a chapter of at least five
theras in order to ordain new bhikkhus. It is possible that the Myanmar
bhikkhus, who seemed to have formed a group separate from the Mon bhikkhus, had
paid more attention to their traditional worship than was beneficial for their
practice of the Dhamma. It is also possible that there was an element of
nationalist rivalry between the Mon bhikkhus and the Myanmar bhikkhus. As he
showed a penchant for the reform movement, the Myanmar king Narapati seems to
have accepted the superiority of the Mon bhikkhus, though he did not neglect
the other bhikkhus. Chapada and his companions refused to accept the ordination
of the Myanmar bhikkhus as legitimate in accordance with Vinaya. They
established their own ordination, following which the Myanmar bhikkhus sent a
delegation to Sri Lanka to receive the Mahavihara ordination for
themselves.
After Chapada's death, the
reform movement soon split into two factions, and eventually each of the four
remaining bhikkhus went his own way, one of them leaving the order altogether.
"Thus in the town of Arimaddana (Pagan) there were four schools....
Because the first of these to come was the school of the Elder Arahan from
Sudhamma (Thaton) it was called the first school; while the others, because
they came later, were called the later schools."[31]
Scholarship in Pagan
It is surprising how quickly
a relatively simple people absorbed the great civilisation that arrived in
their midst so suddenly. Even before the conquest of Thaton, Pagan possessed
some ornate religious buildings, which is indicative of the presence of artists
and craftsmen. It is quite likely, however, that these were Indians from Bengal
and the neighbouring states. The type of Buddhism that had come to Pagan from
India was an esoteric religion, as some old legends indicate. It was the
jealously guarded domain of a group of priests, who made no attempt to instruct
the people but were happy if their superiority remained unquestioned by a
superstitious populace.
The advent of Theravada
Buddhism with its openness and its aim to spread understanding must have been
quite revolutionary in Pagan and obviously the people were eager to acquire the
knowledge offered to them by the bhikkhus. Mabel Bode says in her Pali
Literature of Burma:
Though the Burmese began
their literary history by borrowing from their conquered neighbours, the
Talaings (Mon) -- and not before the eleventh century -- the growth of Pali
scholarship among them was so rapid that the epoch following close on this
tardy beginning is considered one of the best that Burma has seen.[32]
The principal works of the
Pagan period still extant are Pali grammars. The most famous of these is the
Saddaniti, which Aggavamsa completed in 1154. Uttarajiva gave a copy of this
work to the bhikkhus of the Mahavihara in Sri Lanka and it "was received
with enthusiastic admiration, and declared superior to any work of the kind
written by Sinhalese scholars." The Saddaniti is still used to teach
grammar in the monasteries in Myanmar and has been printed many times. B.C. Law
regards it as one of the three principal Pali grammars along with the grammars
by Kaccayana and Moggallana. K.R. Norman says: "The greatest of extant
Pali grammars is the Saddaniti, written by Aggavamsa from Arimaddana [Pagan] in
Burma...."[33] Aggavamsa was also known as the teacher of King
Narapatisithu (1167-1202) and was given the title Aggapandita. Unfortunately,
no other works by this author are known today.
The second famous author of
Pagan was Saddhammajotipala who has been previously mentioned under his clan
name of Chapada. He was a disciple of Uttarajiva and is credited with a great
number of works, but in the case of some it is doubtful whether he actually
composed them himself or merely introduced them from Sri Lanka.[34] His works deal
not only with grammar, but also with questions of monastic discipline (Vinaya)
and the Abhidhamma, which in later centuries was to become a favourite subject
of Myanmar scholars. His work on Kaccayana's grammar, the Suttaniddesa, formed
the foundation of his fame. However, his specialty would appear to have been
the study of Abhidhamma, as no less than four noted works of his on the subject
attained fame: Samkhepavannana, Namacaradipani, Matikatthadipani, and
Patthanagananaya. According to the Pitaka-thamain, a history of Buddhism in
Myanmar, he also devoted a commentary to the Visuddhimagga by Buddhaghosa
called the Visuddhimagga-ganthi.[35] There are no written records that refer to
meditation being practised in Myanmar before this century. However, his interest
in the Visuddhimagga is indicative of an interest in meditation, if only in the
theory rather than in the practice.
Another scholar of Pagan,
Vimalabuddhi, also wrote a commentary concerning Abhidhamma, the
Abhidhammatthasangahatika, in addition to another important grammatical work,
the Nyasa, a commentary on Kaccayana's grammar.
Other grammatical works of
some importance were written, but none acquired the standing of Aggavamsa's
Saddaniti. However, a rather peculiar work worth mentioning is the
Ekakkharakosa by Saddhammakitti. It is a work on Pali lexicography enumerating
words of one letter.
5. Shan Rule
Upper Myanmar
After Narathihapate had fled
Pagan in fear of the Mongol army, he was never able to re-establish his
authority, even though the Mongols supported the Pagan dynasty. The Mongol
court in Peking preferred a united neighbouring country under a single ruler,
but in spite of its efforts Myanmar was divided into several principalities
mainly under Shan tribal leaders. These self-styled princelings paid tribute to
the Chinese Mongol court and were nominally its subjects. The Shan, at this
time still nomadic tribes in the north, broke into an already destabilized
Myanmar like a tidal wave. They penetrated the entire region as far as the Mon
country and established themselves as rulers in many towns and cities. The
intrigues, fratricidal wars, and murders that make up the history of their
courts are innumerable.
A division of the country
into Upper and Lower Myanmar is somewhat arbitrary, as, after the fall of
Pagan, the two regions were composed of many competing principalities. However,
there were the two principle kingdoms of Ava in Upper Myanmar and Pago (Pegu)
in Lower Myanmar. Hostilities between these two prevailed, as well as with the
neighbouring smaller states including the Shan fiefs of Chiang Mai and
Ayutthaya in Thailand. Intrigues within and between courts were rife. Sometimes
these claimed victims only within the circle of the powerful and mighty, and
sometimes whole towns were looted and destroyed, and their population massacred
or carried off into slavery. But, in spite of politically unsettled conditions,
the Sangha survived, because the new rulers, initially somewhat barbaric, soon
accepted the religion of their subjects. Just as the Myanmar had adopted the
religion and culture of the more refined Mon, so the Shan submitted to the
sophisticated civilisation of the peoples they subjugated. The Shan initially
established their capital at Pinya in Upper Myanmar to the north of Pagan and
transferred it to Ava in 1312. Ava was to remain the capital of Upper Myanmar
until the eighteenth century.
The Sasanavamsa praises
Thihathu, the youngest of three Shan brothers who wrested power from the Pagan
dynasty in Upper Myanmar, as a Buddhist king who built monasteries and pagodas.
He had a bhikkhu as his teacher and supported thousands of bhikkhus in his
capital Pinya and later Ava. However, Pagan remained the cultural and religious
capital of the region for the whole of the fourteenth century. Scholarly works
were composed in its monasteries throughout this period whereas no such works
are known to have been written in the new centres of power. The works of this
period of scholarship were mostly concerned with Pali grammar.
Two generations later, a
descendant of Thihathu secured himself a place in religious history as a great
patron of scholarship. As in the courts of some previous kings, his court was
also devoted to scholarly learning; and not only bhikkhus, but also the palace
officials, produced treatises on religious subjects and the Pali language.
Although the political
situation remained unsettled in Upper Myanmar throughout the fifteenth century,
in the main, this affected only those in power and their usurpers. Consequently
the Sangha appears to have flourished, while the traditional devotion to the
support of the Sangha through gifts of the four requisites remained unchanged.
The royal court, followed by the leading families, made great donations of
monasteries, land, and revenue to the bhikkhus.
In approximately 1440, two
Mahatheras from Sri Lanka settled in Ava.[36] Here they joined a group of
famous scholars, of whom Ariyavamsa was the most outstanding. The Sasanavamsa
tells us of his great wisdom and humility in an anecdote.[37]
The elder Ariyavamsa had
studied the books of the Abhidhamma Pitaka, but felt he had not gained real
understanding. Eventually he came to a bhikkhu in Sagaing who kept his mouth
always filled with water in order not to have to engage in meaningless chatter.
Ariyavamsa did not talk to "the Elder Water-bearer," as this bhikkhu
was known in the Myanmar language, but simply performed the duties of a
disciple to his teacher for two days. On the third day, the Venerable
Water-bearer spat out the water and asked Ariyavamsa why he was serving him.
When Ariyavamsa told him that he wanted to learn from him, the Venerable
Water-bearer taught him the Abhidhammattha-vibhavani-tika, a subcommentary on
the Abhidhammattha-sangaha. After two days, Ariyavamsa grasped the meaning and
his teacher asked him to write a commentary on this book in order to help
others to gain understanding.
During the composition of his
first work, Ariyavamsa submitted his writings to the assembled bhikkhus on
every Uposatha day, reading out what he had composed and asking his brethren to
correct any mistakes they found. On one occasion, a visiting bhikkhu twice made
a sound of disapproval during the reading. Ariyavamsa carefully noted the
passages where the sound of disapproval had occurred. On reflecting on them in
the evening, he found one error of grammar where he had used the wrong gender
and also a repetition, an error of style. He approached the bhikkhu who had
made the sounds during the reading and out of gratitude for the correction gave
him his own outer robe.
Ariyavamsa composed several
works in Pali: works on the Abhidhamma, on grammatical subjects, and a study of
the Jatakas. But his very important contribution to Buddhism in Myanmar was the
fact that all his writing was in the Myanmar vernacular. He was probably the
first bhikkhu to write treatises on religious subjects in the local idiom, thus
making the religion accessible to a greater number of people. The work by
Ariyavamsa still known today is a commentary on the anutika (sub-commentary) of
the Abhidhamma.
Towards the end of the
fifteenth century, a bhikkhu by the name of Silavamsa composed several epic
poems in Pali. They were, of course, of a religious nature dealing with
subjects such as the life of the Buddha, or Jataka stories. This genre was
later very popular in the Myanmar language and there are many poems relating
Jataka stories which were sung by bards throughout the country until recently.
In the Sasanavamsa, however, Pannasami disapproves of bhikkhus writing or
reciting poetry as he considers it to be in breach of the Vinaya rules. He says
that because of this, Silavamsa's name was excluded from the Theraparampara, a
listing of eminent bhikkhus of Myanmar by ancient chroniclers.
Lower Myanmar
The Mon civilization in Lower
Myanmar flourished after Pagan's importance waned, once again reliving the era
of glory that it had experienced prior to Anawratha's conquest.
Wareru, the Shan ruler who
had established himself in Martaban in 1287, was soon converted to Buddhism. He
was a Shan peddler who had astutely wrested power from a son of the last king
of Pagan, a son who had revolted against his father and founded an independent
kingdom. Under Wareru's rule, scholarship in the Mon monasteries flourished and
a code of law was compiled which still forms the foundation of the legal
literature of Myanmar. The Mon bhikkhus based this code on ancient Hindu codes
of law which had found their way into Mon tradition through Indian colonisers
and merchants.
At the beginning of the
fourteenth century two respected Mon theras named Buddhavamsa and Mahanaga
revived the tradition of their countryman Chapada in making a pilgrimage to Sri
Lanka. There, they accepted new ordination in the Mahavihara monastery, the
guardian of Sinhalese orthodoxy. The bhikkhus of the Mahavihara asked those
ordained in other countries to revert to the lay-state before being re-ordained
as novices and full bhikkhus, as it was considered of the utmost importance
that the ordination be handed down in an unbroken tradition from the time of
the Buddha. This was especially significant in Myanmar where there were some
reservations about the continuity of the tradition. By disrobing, a bhikkhu
forgoes the seniority he has acquired through the years spent in robes and, in
this case, he also states that he considers his former ordination invalid. One
can imagine that such a step is not taken lightly but only after careful
consideration.
The Great Reformation of the
Sangha
King Dhammazedi (1472-92)
takes a special place in the history of the religion in Myanmar. He unified the
Sangha in the Mon country and purified the order of the bhikkhus. He recorded
his great service to the country in the Kalyani inscription, which will be
quoted below.
Dhammazedi was a bhikkhu of
Mon origin who taught one of the queens at the royal palace in Ava. This lady,
Shin Sawbu, was the daughter of the king of Pago. She had been queen to several
unfortunate kings of Upper Mynamar and had beeen conveyed into the hands of the
subsequent kings along with the throne. She had become disenchanted with the
life of a queen and desired to return to her native land. Dhammazedi and a
fellow Mon bhikkhu helped her to escape and brought her back to Pago.
Eventually she became queen of Pago , but after reigning only a few years she
wished to retire and do works of merit. She found that the only people worthy
of the throne of Pago were her teachers, the two bhikkhus. She let fate decide
which would be the future king by concealing miniature imitations of the
regalia in one of the two bowls in which she offered them their daily alms
food.
She handed the throne over to
Dhammazedi who had received the fateful bowl and spent the rest of her life at
Dagon (Yangon) building the terrace around the Shwedagon Pagoda and gilding the
sacred mound. The Shwedagon became what it is today chiefly thanks to Shin
Sawbu's munificence.
Dhammazedi assumed government
in Pago after leaving the Order of the bhikkhus. He moved the capital closer to
the Swemawdaw Pagoda and built several pagodas and shrines. His name is also
connected with a collection of wise judgements and the translation of Wareru's
Code of Law into the vernacular. In 1472, Dhammazedi sent a mission to Bodhgaya
to repair the temple and make plans and drawings of it.
Dhammazedi had received his
education in monasteries of Ava which adhered to the Sihala Sangha. The Sihala
Sangha was the faction of the Sangha of Myanmar that accepted only the
Mahavihara of Sri Lanka as the ultimate authority in religious questions. King
Dhammazedi knew from direct experience the state of the Sangha in Lower Myanmar
and was determined to improve it. Having lived as a bhikkhu for so many years,
he was also singularly qualified to change the Sangha for the better.
He chose twenty-two senior
bhikkhus to lead the reform movement and informed them:
Reverend Sirs, the upasampada
ordination of the bhikkhus of the Mon country now appears to us to be invalid.
Therefore, how can the religion, which is based on such invalid ordination,
last to the end of 5000 years? Reverend Sirs, from the establishment of the
religion in the island of Sri Lanka up to this present day, there has been
existing in this island an exceedingly pure sect of bhikkhus.... Receive at
their hands the upasampada ordination ... and if you make this form of the
upasampada ordination the seed of the religion, as it were, plant it, and cause
it to sprout forth by conferring such ordination on men of good family in this
Mon country.... Reverend Sirs, by your going to the island of Sri Lanka, much
merit and great advantage will accrue to you.[38]
At the beginning of 1476 the
chosen bhikkhus with their twenty-two disciples embarked on the journey to Sri
Lanka. They sailed in two ships, one taking about two months while the other
needed six full months to arrive on the shore of the Buddhist island. They
received the upasampada ordination at the Mahavihara from 17th to 20th July
1476. The return journey of the forty-four Mon bhikkhus was not so smooth,
however. One group arrived home in August 1476, while the other group took
three years to return to Pago and ten of the bhikkhus died en route. Following
their return, Dhammazedi had a pure ordination hall(sima) consecrated and made
the following proclamation:
May all those who possess
faith and desire to receive the bhikkhu's ordination at the hands of the
bhikkhus ordained in Sri Lanka come to the Kalyani sima and receive ordination.
Let those who have not faith and do not desire to receive the bhikkhus
ordination of the Sinhalese, remain as they are.[39]
In order to confer the
bhikkhu ordination outside the middle country (i.e. northern India), a chapter
of five bhikkhus is needed, one of whom must be qualified to serve as preceptor
(upajjhaya) and another as teacher (acariya). The latter two must have spent at
least ten years in robes as fully ordained bhikkhus. So if Dhammazedi wanted to
have local bhikkhus ordained in the new ordination, it was necessary to find
two senior bhikkhus. Since those returning from Sri Lanka had been ordained for
a period of only three years, they could not act as preceptor or teacher. Local
bhikkhus who had not received the ordination of the Mahavihara in Sri Lanka
were unacceptable, as otherwise the ordination would again have been
invalidated by one who was not of pure descent. Fortunately, the two theras who
had undertaken a pilgrimage to Sri Lanka at the beginning of the century and
had received the Sinhalese ordination at that time, were still alive. As a
result, one was able to act as preceptor and the other as teacher of the newly
ordained bhikkhus. The stage was now set for the reformation and unification of
the Mon Order of bhikkhus and soon the re-ordination of almost the entire Order
of bhikkhus began. The Kalyani inscription records the number of 15,666
ordinations in hundreds of ordination halls newly constructed for the
purpose.
It is interesting to note how
forcefully the king reformed the Order through royal decrees that would hardly
be tolerated today. He declared that all bhikkhus who were, for example,
practising medicine or other arts and crafts or who even slightly infringed on
the Vinaya rules would be expelled. The king as a layman, however, did not have
the power to defrock a bhikkhu who had not broken one of the four Parajika
rules.[40] Dhammazedi circumvented this by threatening to punish with royal
penalties the mother, father, relatives, and lay supporters of bhikkhus whose
behaviour was not in accordance with the rules of the Vinaya.
It goes without saying that a
king who could allow himself to take such drastic measures in regard to the
Sangha must have had the support of a broad section of the Order and also the
people. After years spent in robes, he was keenly aware of the problems of
monastic life and because of this even senior bhikkhus respected and accepted
his council. We can assume that all his actions to reform the Order were firstly
discussed with his bhikkhu teachers and then implemented with their blessings.
There being no such thing as a Buddhist Church with a central authority, the
Sangha has little possibility to regulate itself. Only the committed support of
a worldly power can protect the Order of bhikkhus from those who take advantage
of the respect that is given to the yellow robe.
Dhammazedi's support for the
religion was so great that his fame spread well beyond the borders of Myanmar
and bhikkhus from neighbouring countries such as Thailand came to his realm to
receive ordination there. Though the reform movement did not spread to Upper
Myanmar and cause the same mass ordinations there, it did not remain without
influence in the kingdom of Ava and other principalities, and many bhikkhus
came to the Mon bhikkhus to receive the Kalyani ordination.[41]
6. The Myanmar Build an
Empire
Shan versus Myanmar
The beginning of the
sixteenth century was one of the most difficult periods for Buddhism in Upper
Myanmar. While the religious fervour of Dhammazedi still lived on in the
kingdom of Pago in Ava, Shan rulers were endeavouring to bring about the
destruction of the Sangha. A Shan king named Thohanbwa (?1527-1543) was
particularly well-known for his barbarity. He destroyed pagodas and monasteries
and robbed their treasures. Although he was a king, he was uneducated and
ignorant. Hence fearing the influence of the bhikkhus and suspicious of their
moves, he brought about the massacre of thousands. Under these terror regimes
of the Shan rulers the Myanmar did not feel safe. Many, including learned
bhikkhus, fled to Toungoo, the stronghold of the Myanmar race in the south.
Despite the anarchy prevailing, some respected treatises on Pali grammar were
written in Upper Myanmar in these years.
Better times, however, lay
ahead for Buddhism in the Golden Land. Two successive kings of Myanmar origin
from Toungoo would unite the country and fulfil the duties of Buddhist kings.
The wars fought by these two kings, King Tabinshwehti (1531-50) and King
Bayinnaung (1551-81), were long in duration and exceedingly cruel. They
succeeded in gaining control of the Mon kingdom in Lower Myanmar and the
kingdom of Ava. They conquered all of what is today Myanmar including the Shan
states as far east as Chiang Mai, and made incursions into lower Thailand and
Yunnan where some kings paid tribute to the Myanmar court.
Bayinnaung deferred to the
Mon as far as culture and religion were concerned and dressed in Mon style.
Under his royal patronage, the Mon Sangha produced scholarly works on grammar
and the Abhidhamma and also helped with the collection and standardisation of a
code of law based on the old Mon code compiled during Wareru's reign.
Bayinnaung not only unified
the country politically, but also made Buddhist principles the standard for his
entire dominion. He forbade the sacrificial slaughter of animals, a custom
still practised by the Shan chiefs, the worshippers of certain spirits, and the
followers of some other religions. He built pagodas and monasteries in all the
newly conquered lands and installed learned bhikkhus in order to convert the
often uncivilised inhabitants to gentler ways. The main religious building of
his reign is the Mahazedi Pagoda, a majestic monument to the Buddha in the
capital, Pago. He also crowned the main pagodas in Myanmar with the jewels of
his own crown, a custom practised by many rulers of the country. He continued
in the tradition of Dhammazedi, in supporting the Sihala Sangha and in
sponsoring the ordination of many bhikkhus in the Kalyani Ordination Hall near
Pago. It is said that he built as many monasteries as there were years in his
life.
It remains a mystery how a
king who had such deep devotion to the religion of the Buddha and who was so
generous towards it could spend his life fighting campaign after campaign to
expand his realm. He caused bloodshed and suffering in the conquered regions
and at home people starved because farmers were drafted into the army. However
this may be, Bayinnaung seems to have been able to reconcile fighting
expansionist wars with being a pious Buddhist.
After King Bayinnaung, Pago
rapidly lost its significance. Bayinnaung's son persecuted the Mon and
consequently re-ignited racial tensions that would plague Myanmar for
centuries. Later, Pago was to fall into the hands of a Portuguese adventurer
who pillaged the pagodas and monasteries. Eventually the whole of Lower
Myanmar, already depopulated by the incessant campaigns of Bayinnaung and his
successors, was pillaged by all the surrounding kings and princelings. The
country was devastated and people starved.
The Sasanavamsa records one
major problem of the Vinaya during the sixteenth century. At the beginning of
the century, the bhikkhus of Toungoo were divided over whether or not bhikkhus
could partake of the juice of the toddy palm which was generally used to
prepare fermented drink. The dispute was settled by a respected thera who
decided that toddy juice was permissible only if it was freshly
harvested.
Political Influence of the
Sangha in Early Myanmar
What motivated the royal
court probably remained largely a mystery to the ordinary citizens, except when
they were pressed into service in the king's army. There was little sense of
collective responsibility as it is cultivated in today's democracies. Everyone
looked after himself and his immediate circle and governments were sometimes
more of a scourge than a protection. Kings did not always provide a visible
administration beyond appointing governors at whose mercy local people were.
These governors often endeavoured to establish independence as soon as they
perceived inherent weaknesses in their masters. Many accumulated great wealth
for themselves.
There was, however, one element
in the policy of rulers which, with a few exceptions, remained fairly stable
throughout Myanmar history. Most kings supported Buddhism and the Sangha
provided a framework of continuity as no other entity could. Ray writes:
They (the kings) were good
Buddhists and never did they waver from their kingly duty of acting as the
patron-guardian of the faith of the country. Moreover, whatever their numerical
strength, the bhikkhus were real spokesmen of the people and the monasteries
were the popular assemblies as it were; and each king that came to the throne
sought to win the bhikkhus over to his side.[42]
The best insurance of a
peaceful life in Myanmar was to become a bhikkhu, as they were not drafted into
armies or enslaved by conquerors and as long as the lay people had food to eat
they were also fed. The bhikkhus not only provided a link between the people
and those in power, they often played a role in the affairs of state. This is
illustrated by an event which occurred in the middle of the seventeenth century
and is related by the Sasanavamsa.
The king, Ukkamsika,
popularly known as King Thalun, was a devoted Buddhist and thanks to him,
learning flourished in Myanmar. The king's son, however, tried to dethrone his
father, and Thalun, taken by surprise, had to flee accompanied only by two
companions. Coming upon a river, the only vessel in sight was the boat of a
samanera. The samanera agreed to take them onboard as passengers, and they
ended up in the samanera's monastery where they revealed their true identities
and asked for protection from their persecutors. They were referred to another
monastery where lived a bhikkhu wise in worldly affairs. Following his advice,
the bhikkhus formed a living wall around the monastery and, as no Buddhist will
attack a man in robes, the rebels who had come to kill the king had to
withdraw. Another example of the beneficial influence of the Sangha is their
appeal for clemency to King Bayinnaung. Bhikkhus often tried to stay executions
in accordance with the principles of metta (loving kindness) and karuna
(compassion) and sometimes their efforts achieved success.
During one of Bayinnaung's
Thai campaigns, the peasantry around Pago revolted and razed the royal city to
the ground. Bayinnaung, after hurrying back from Ayutthaya, captured several
thousand rebels and was ready to burn them alive. It was the custom then to
burn deserters from the army alive and obviously rebellion was considered to be
a crime of similar gravity. The bhikkhus of all races intervened on behalf of
the poor wretches and were able to save all from the pyre, except for seventy
ring leaders, the most serious offenders.
There are several instances
in Myanmar history when bhikkhus also mediated between contending kings or
princes and helped to avoid bloodshed. This was often the case when cities were
besieged and both parties realised that they could not win. The king who was
besieged would normally take the initiative and send his bhikkhus to the king
in attack. Often the bhikkhus were authorised to negotiate on behalf of the
monarch. An armistice agreed by or in the presence of bhikkhus was more likely
to be honoured than a promise given without their blessings. Therefore, if the
two parties were sincere in their offers to negotiate, they usually requested
bhikkhus to be mediators and judges.
The Spread of Abhidhamma
The seventeenth century was a
period of dynamic growth in the history of Buddhism in Myanmar. Many
outstanding developments took place, and principal among these were the
numerous translations of texts into the Myanmar language and the great increase
in the study of the Abhidhamma. It is quite possible that the two developments
were inter-connected.
In the first half of the
century, Manirathana Thera translated the following texts into the Myanmar
language: Atthasalini, Sammohavinodani, Kankhavitarani,
Abhidhammatthavibhavini, Sankhepavannana. Of these five, only the
Kankhavitarani, Buddhaghosa's commentary on the Patimokkha, is not concerned
with Abhidhamma. In the second half of the century Aggadhammalankara translated
Kaccayana's Pali grammar, the Abhidhammatthasangaha, Matika, Dhatukatha,
Yamaka, and the Patthana into the Myanmar tongue. Later, the Nettippakarana was
also translated.
It cannot be a coincidence
that nine out of twelve translated works were texts of the Abhidhamma or its
commentaries. The reason for these translations must have been a developing
interest in the psychology of Buddhism among the Buddhist followers who could
not themselves read Pali. Whether these were only bhikkhus or whether lay
people were also interested in exploring the scriptures for themselves is
difficult to determine now. However, what is known is that almost every boy and
many of the girls attended monastic schools, whose curriculum was probably
established by this period, if not earlier. Included in the curriculum were
studies of the Mangala Sutta, Metta Sutta, Ratana Sutta, and the other
parittas, as well as basic literacy which included some Pali. In addition a
number of the Abhidhamma texts had to be committed to memory.
The intention behind these
translations and commentaries in the Myanmar language was obviously to make the
words of the Buddha accessible to a wider audience who would, then, not be
solely dependent on the authority of the Pali scholars.
In the later half of the
century, the bhikkhu Devacakkhobhasa designed a system for the study and
teaching of the Patthana, the last book of the Abhidhamma, which in Myanmar is
believed to be the highest teaching of the Buddha. The king at the time of
Devacakkhobhasa was so impressed by the bhikkhu's proficiency in these higher
teachings and by his system of instruction, that he ordered the Patthana to be
studied in all the monasteries of Myanmar. It is not unreasonable to assume that
the king himself studied these teachings. Otherwise he would hardly have been
in a position to appreciate them and make them compulsory reading for the
Myanmar bhikkhus.
This emphasis on Abhidhamma
in general and the Patthana in particular has survived in Myanmar to the
present day. The movement, therefore, that began in the seventeenth century is
still of great significance for Buddhism there. The Patthana, for instance, is
ubiquitous in Myanmar. The twenty-four conditions of the Patthana can be found printed
on the fans of the bhikkhus, on calendars, and on posters. In some monasteries,
the bhikkhus are woken every morning by twenty-four strokes on a hollow tree
trunk, while the bhikkhu striking the tree trunk has to recite the twenty-four
conditions as he does so. Even little children learn to recite the twenty-four
conditions along with the suttas of protection. As the Patthana is the highest
and most difficult teaching of the Buddha, it is believed that it will be the
first to be lost. In order to slow the decline of the Sasana, many people of
Myanmar, bhikkhus and lay people alike, memorize the Patthana and recite it
daily.
In Pagan, the Jataka stories
and the history of the Buddha's life were the main subjects of religious study.
In later centuries, Pali grammar and the study of the Vinaya were foremost on
the agenda. Dhammazedi's reform movement drew the attention back to the
foundations of all monastic life, the code of conduct for the bhikkhus as laid
down by the Buddha himself.
Though stricter observation
of the Vinaya would have to be re-emphasised in the future, its foundation was
firm enough to insure that progressive reform movements would be instigated
within the Sangha and not be dependent on external impetus. How far a bhikkhu
was allowed to stray from the ideal had been defined in strictures that had
become integral to the Sangha. Based on this foundation of sila (right conduct,
morality), the Sangha was now free to give increased attention to higher
teachings.
The age of the Abhidhamma had
dawned. The Abhidhamma remained no longer the domain of a chosen few, but began
to be studied by many. The wealth of translations from the Abhidhamma would
suggest that in the seventeenth century it had become so popular that it may
have been taught even to lay people. The Myanmar language had developed and had
been enriched with Pali terms so that it could convey the difficult concepts of
Abhidhamma. Civilisation had matured to an extent never seen before. Myanmar
was ready to study the analysis of mind and matter as taught by the Buddha. The
stage was being set for the widespread practice of insight meditation
(vipassana bhavana) in later times.
7. The Eighteenth and
Nineteenth Centuries
In the succession of rulers
of the eighteenth century some were strong and despotic, while others were
ineffective and withdrawn. Some tried to expand their power and fought wars,
while others appeared satisfied with existing conditions. There were several
wars with Thailand and the population of Myanmar had to bear the deprivations
that war invariably brings not only to the conquered, but also to the country
where the conquering armies are levied.
After a war between the Mon
and the Myanmar in which the Mon initially attacked and then conquered Ava
itself, the Myanmar king Alaungpaya (1752-60), who believed himself a
Bodhisatta, crushed Mon resistance once and for all. After Pago had fallen into
his hands in 1756, Lower Myanmar was devastated and many of the Mon survivors
fled to Thailand or were deported as slaves.
Like Bayinnaung, Alaungpaya
established a Myanmar empire, at the same time decimating the population of the
country by drafting the peasantry into the army for campaigns against Ayutthaya
(Thailand) and other countries. The Sasanavamsa does not comment on the
atrocity of war. War is perceived as it is, cruel and pitiless -- but it is the
affair of rulers, not of bhikkhus. The manner in which rulers conduct their
affairs is entirely their responsibility. Pannasami probably took very
seriously the Buddha's injunction that a member of the Sangha should not talk
about rulers and royal affairs.
The Sasanavamsa pays much
attention to a controversy which raged in monastic circles throughout the
eighteenth century. At the beginning of the century, some bhikkhus began to
wear their robes outside the monasteries as they were worn within them, that
is, covering only one shoulder. Even when going on their daily alms round, they
failed to drape the robe in the traditional way. When challenged as to the
orthodoxy of this practice, they produced various interpretations and opinions,
but could not validate their practice through the authority of the scriptures.
Different kings endorsed one or other of the two opinions and bhikkhus of the
orthodox school even died for their conviction when a king had outlawed the
covering of both shoulders.
The most interesting aspect
of this historical period of the religion is not so much the actual controversy
as the power the king had in religious affairs. The kings of Myanmar were not
normally expert in the Vinaya and yet they took the final decision in matters
of monastic discipline after due consultation with the leaders of the Sangha.
In the more than one hundred years that this controversy prevailed, different
kings supported the orthodoxy of either view. This shows that this system is
not entirely satisfactory. However, the right view which was in accordance with
the Vinaya did eventually triumph due to the persistence of the majority of the
Sangha. Only the worldly power was in a position to regulate the Sangha into
which undesirable elements entered repeatedly. To keep the Order pure, it had
to be always under careful scrutiny and bogus ascetics had to be removed. The
kings of Myanmar in co-operation with the Sangharajas[43] and the other senior
bhikkhus had established a system of supervision of the bhikkhus by royal
officials. In every township, the king's representatives were responsible for
ensuring that the bhikkhus adhered scrupulously to the rules of the Vinaya. Bhikkhus
who transgressed were taken before religious courts and punished according to
the code of discipline.
The controversy concerning
the correct manner of wearing the robes came up for arbitration for the last
time under Bodawpaya (1782-1819), the fifth son of Alaungpaya. He decided in
favour of orthodoxy and thenceforth all bhikkhus had to cover both shoulders on
the daily alms round. This ruling created one unified sect throughout Myanmar
under the leadership of a council of senior bhikkhus appointed by the king.
These were called the Thudhamma Sayadaws and the Thudhamma sect has survived in
Myanmar down to the present day.
Bodawpaya appointed a chapter
of eight eminent bhikkhus as Sangharajas, leaders of the Sangha, and charged
them with the duty to safeguard the purity of the Order of bhikkhus. As a
direct result of the discipline and stability created by the work of these
senior bhikkhus, the Sangha prospered, and consequently scholarship flourished
under Bodawpaya's reign.
The name of the
Mahasangharaja Nanabhivamsa is especially noteworthy in this respect.
Nanabhivamsa was an eminently learned bhikkhu who had proven his wisdom even as
a young man. Only five years after his ordination as a bhikkhu, he had
completed a commentary (tika) on the Nettippakarana. Eight years after full
ordination, at the age of twenty-eight, he became Sangharaja, and then Mahasangharaja,
the title conferred by the king on the highest bhikkhu in his realm. Soon after
this, he wrote his well respected "new sub-commentary" on the Digha
Nikaya, the Sadhujjanavilasini. At the request of the king, he wrote a
commentary on Buddhaghosa's Jatakatthakatha and several other
treatises.[44]
The king was so devoted to
the head of the Sangha that he dedicated a "very magnificent five storied
monastery" to him and later many other monasteries as well. According to
the Sasanavamsa, Nanabhivamsa was not only a scholar, but also practised the
ascetic practices (dhutanga) sitting always alone. He divided his time between
the various monasteries under his tutelage and was an indefatigable teacher of
the scriptures.
Scholarship flourished in the
reign of King Bodawpaya and Myanmar was able, for the first time, to return
thanks to Sri Lanka for nurturing the religion in the Golden Land. The bhikkhu
ordination (upasampada) preserved in Myanmar was re-introduced to Sri Lanka
where the Sasana had been interferred with by an unwise king.
The Amarapura Nikaya in Sri
Lanka
In the later half of the
eighteenth century, the upasampada ordination in Sri Lanka was barred to all
except the members of the landed aristocracy. This was a result of royal decree
probably issued with the support of at least a section of the Sangha. However,
this was a flagrant defilement of the letter and the spirit of the Buddha's
instructions. The conferring of the upasampada ordination is dependent only
upon such conditions as the candidate being a man, free from government
service, free of debt, free of contagious diseases, and upon his having his
parents' consent, etc. Members of the lower castes had now only the possibility
of becoming novices (samanera), a condition that created dissatisfaction. A
sizeable section of ordained bhikkhus also disapproved of the royal order, but
were in no position to defy it within the country. The only recourse for those
of the lower castes desiring the higher ordination was therefore to travel to
other Buddhist countries to ordain. At first, missions were sent to Thailand
where Dhammazedi's reforms lived on through the ordination conferred to Thai
bhikkhus in Pago and through the scores of Mon bhikkhus who had found refuge in
Thailand from the Myanmar armies.
At the beginning of the
nineteenth century, however, Sinhalese bhikkhus began travelling to Myanmar to
find the pure ordination there. The fame of the then Mahasangharaja of Myanmar,
Nanabhivamsa, influenced their choice. Scholarship had developed in all fields:
Pali grammar, the Vinaya, the Suttanta, and the Abhidhamma. Myanmar had, after
a long period of development, become the custodian of Buddhism.
The first delegation from Sri
Lanka arrived in 1800 and was welcomed with a magnificent reception by King
Bodawpaya himself. Nanabhivamsa, the wise Sangharaja, ordained the samaneras as
bhikkhus and instructed them for some time in the scriptures.[45] On returning
to Sri Lanka, they were accompanied by five Myanmar bhikkhus and a letter from
Nanabhivamsa to the Sinhalese Sangharaja. Five bhikkhus form a full chapter and
apparently the Myanmar bhikkhus were permitted to ordain bhikkhus without class
distinction. Even today, Sri Lanka possesses three schools, the Amarapura
Nikaya, the Siyama Nikaya (Thai school), and the Ramanna Nikaya.
The Amarapura Nikaya was so
called because King Bodawpaya had established his capital in Amarapura (between
Mandalay and Ava) and the bhikkhus had received their ordination there. The
Ramanna Nikaya[46] was presumably founded by bhikkhus who had received
ordination from Mon bhikkhus in the tradition of the Dhammazedi reforms and who
had fled to southern Thailand from the wrath of the Myanmar kings. Both these
schools were allowed to ordain bhikkhus without discriminating against the
lower classes. Only the Siyama Sangha (the Thai ordination) continued to follow
the royal command, and ordained only novices of the higher castes as bhikkhus.
Missions from Sri Lanka continued to travel to Amarapura to consult with its senior
theras and they were all given royal patronage and sent back with gifts of the
Pali scriptures and commentarial texts.
Bodawpaya's Relationship with
the Sangha
Although King Bodawpaya would
appear to have been a pious and devout king, his relationship with the Sangha
was somewhat problematic. He supported it at times and even used it to extend
his own glory, but at times he seemed almost jealous of the respect the
bhikkhus received from the people. He realised that the bhikkhus were not
respected out of fear, but were held in genuine esteem and affection by his
subjects. His jealousy became apparent on different occasions.
At one time, he declared that
from then on the bhikkhus were no longer to be addressed by the traditional
title "Hpoungyi" meaning "The One of Great Merit." This
form of address was to be reserved for the king. Then again he tried to
confiscate land and other goods given to the Sangha and to pagodas by previous
generations. When the Sangharajas could not answer his questions to his
satisfaction, he invited the Muslim clergy for a meal to test their faith. He
had heard that they were so strict in the observance of their discipline that
they would rather die than eat pork. Unfortunately for them, they did not
display great heroism as they all ate the pork offered to them by the king.
Bodawpaya is also reputed to have been beset by a form of megalomania. He
wanted to force the Sangha to confirm officially that he was the Bodhisatta of
the next Buddha to come in this world cycle, the Buddha Metteyya. On this
issue, however, the Sangha was not to be bent even in the face of royal wrath.
The bhikkhus refused, and the king was finally forced to accept defeat. Another
expression of his inflated self-esteem was the Mingun Pagoda near Sagaing. It
was to be by far the biggest temple ever built. Scores of slaves and labourers
worked on its construction until funds were depleted. However, it was never
completed and remains today as a huge shapeless square of millions of
bricks.
To his credit, King Bodawpaya
imposed the morality of the Five Precepts in his whole realm and had offenders
executed immediately. Capital punishment was prescribed for selling and
drinking alcohol, killing larger animals such as buffaloes, spreading heretical
views, and the smoking of opium. Bodawpaya ruled the country with an iron fist
and brought offending lay people as well as bhikkhus to heel. His successors
were benevolent, but possibly they could be so only because of the fear his
rule had instilled in the populace.
The Fate of Buddhism in Upper
and Lower Myanmar
Bodawpaya's successor,
Bagyidaw (1819-1837), was the first of the Myanmar kings to lose territory to
the white invaders coming from the West. The Myanmar court was so out of touch
with the modern world that it still believed Myanmar to be the centre of the
world and her army virtually invincible. Hence the king was not unduly
disturbed when the British raj, governing the Indian sub-continent, declared
war on the Kingdom of Ava in 1824 (Bagyidaw had moved the capital back to Ava).
It came to a battle near the coast in which the Myanmar general Mahabandhula
achieved little or nothing against modern British arms. The Indian colonial
government occupied all of the Myanmar coast as far south as Tenasserim in 1826
and forced the treaty of Yandabo on King Bagyidaw. In the treaty, he was forced
to accept the new borders established by the Indian government and pay
compensation to the invaders for the annexation of the coast of Lower
Myanmar.
However, Bagyidaw made a very
important contribution to the development of the Sangha and to the literature
of Myanmar in general. His predecessor, Bodawpaya, had united the Sangha by
resolving the dispute relating to the draping of the robe over one or two
shoulders. Bagyidaw saw the necessity of creating stability for the Sangha. He
felt that this could be achieved to some extent by bestowing on it a sense of
its own history. He commissioned a work on the history of the religion starting
from the time of the Buddha, which was to show an unbroken succession of the
pure tradition from teacher to pupil. Its purpose was to praise the diligent
theras and expose the shameless ones.
This work, the
Thathana-lin-ga-ya-kyan, was composed at the king's request by the ex-bhikkhu
Mahadhamma-thin-gyan, a leading member of the committee appointed by King
Bagyidaw to compile the famous Hman-nan-ya-za-win, The Glass-palace Chronicle,
a secular history of Myanmar. The Thathana-wun-tha (Sasanavamsa)
-lin-ga-ya-kyan was completed in 1831; and in 1897, it was printed in the form
of a modern book for the first time in Yangon. Pannasami based his Sasanavamsa
on this work. About forty percent of the Sasanavamsa is straight translation
from the original work, about forty percent summaries and paraphrasing of the
latter, and only some twenty percent Pannasami's own work.[47] Pannasami states
in his introduction to the Sasanavamsa that his treatise is based on the works
of the ancients (porana). The concept of mental property or copyright had not
been born and there was no moral need to refer the reader to sources except to
give authority to a statement. The only references that would lend authority to
a treatise would be the scriptures, their commentaries, and sub-commentaries,
but not a work as recent as the Thathana-wuntha-lin-ga-ya-kyan.
The preface to the original
work in Myanmar explains the reason for its compilation. The king's
representative had many times pleaded with the author to write a history of the
succession of [righteous] religious teachers so that the people would not
become heretical. Apparently the king felt that the lack of a work recording
the history of the pure religion in its entirety left scope for wrong views to
arise. But with an authoritative record of the lineage of teachers, bhikkhus
could not call on views of shameless bhikkhus of the past anymore in order to
support their heresies. This is exactly what had happened again and again
through the centuries and especially in the robe-draping dispute. The
ekamsikas, the one-shoulder-drapers, had repeatedly dug out obscure teachers in
order to support their point of view. This was to be made impossible once and
for all.
Whether this has been
successful is difficult to ascertain without a detailed study of the
developments in the Sangha since the publication of this work. However, the
fact that the original Myanmar chronicle was revised and translated into Pali
for the Fifth Buddhist Council indicates that it was by this time considered a
useful tool to put the king's authority behind a well-defined orthodox lineage,
thus making it easy to refute heresy by referring to the historical
teachers.
Tharrawaddy-Min
King Bagyidaw never overcame
his shock over the loss of part of his realm. He was declared insane and was
removed from the throne by Tharawaddy-Min (1837-1846), King Mindon's
father.
In the reign of
Tharrawaddy-Min, another mission from Sri Lanka visited Myanmar and was
received by the Sangharaja Neyyadhammabhivamsa. Neyyadhamma instructed the two
bhikkhus and the accompanying novice in the teachings and conferred the bhikkhu
ordination on the novice. He is known for his critical emendation of the text
of the Saddhammapajjotika and its translation into Myanmar. He was also the
teacher of the later Sangharaja Pannasami, the compiler of the Sasanavamsa and
one of the most influential theras at the time of King Mindon. Neyyadhamma
showed the need for a recension of at least some of the Pali texts by editing
the Saddhammapajjotika. His disciple, Pannasami, was to preside over the recension
of the entire Tipitaka as Sangharaja under King Mindon.
Pagan-Min
Tharrawaddy-Min was himself
deposed because of insanity by his son Pagan-Min (1846-52), the brother of
Mindon-Min. Pagan-Min appointed Pannajotabhidhaja as his Sangharaja. In his tenure,
scholarship received encouragement as the Sangharaja himself wrote a commentary
and its sub-commentary in Myanmar on the Anguttara Nikaya. Other works of the
time, all in the vernacular, are a translation of the Saddhammavilasini and
commentaries on the Samyutta Nikaya and the Digha Nikaya. This is also the time
when the author of the Sasanavamsa appears. He started his scholarly career
with the translation into Myanmar of a commentary on the Saddatthabhedacinta.
His next work was a comparison of the existing versions of the
Abhidhanappadipika and the translation of his emended text.
In accord with the
pre-eminence Myanmar had achieved in the Theravada Buddhist world, the kings of
the country became less fierce and wars were fewer. The successors of Bodawpaya
seem to have shown a genuine interest in religion as well as in improving the
administration of the country. Upper Myanmar moved into a period of peace,
which meant improved conditions for the bhikkhus.
The first half of the
nineteenth century saw the translation of many Pali texts into the Myanmar
language. Almost the whole of the Suttanta was now available in the vernacular
and many commentaries and sub-commentaries on Suttanta, Abhidhamma, and the
Vinaya were composed in it. This not only made it easier for bhikkhus with
limited linguistic skills to study the texts, but also made them readily
accessible to the laity. That people in a peaceful country have more time for
the study of religion is obvious and soon Myanmar would see the first Buddhist
texts printed on modern printing presses. This made it possible for a great
number of people to acquire texts relatively cheaply without having to pay a
scribe to copy them laboriously onto palm leaves.
Politically Pagan-Min was no
luckier than Bagyidaw, as he lost the provinces of Pathein (Bassein) and Yangon
(Rangoon) to the British, who were ever ready to create some pretext for war.
So, in 1852, the Kingdom of Ava lost access to the sea and became increasingly
dependent on the colonial power. Like his father, Pagan-Min was overthrown in a
palace revolt. Although not a leader of the uprising, his brother Mindon was
placed on the throne. He did not execute the deposed king as was usually the
case after a revolt, but allowed him to end his days in dignity.
The Colonial Administration
and the Sangha
The occupation by the British
forces was of utmost significance for the Sangha as the British administration
did not grant the traditional protection afforded it by a Buddhist ruler. In
accordance with the colonial policy established in India, that the colonial
government should be strictly secular, the new lords refused to take on the
role of a Buddhist monarch and accept responsibility for the enforcing of the
bhikkhus' discipline. Without this, Buddhism in Lower Myanmar soon suffered and
offending bhikkhus went unpunished. The colonial administration would recognise
its mistake only much later, when it was too late, and when they were not able
to establish control in the Sangha any longer.[48]
King Mindon
Even today King Mindon's
reign (1852-1877) is surrounded by the mystique of a golden era in the minds of
the Myanmar people. No war occurred during the twenty-five years of his tenure
and the king himself is said to have been of gentle disposition and adverse to
violence. He even declared a dislike for capital punishment which was
customarily inflicted by sovereigns for the slightest disobedience or even
disagreement.[49] He was not only held in esteem by his subjects, but even
praised by a British envoy. The colonisers' comments on the Myanmar and their
kings were usually dictated by a parochial narrow-mindedness and a simplistic
view that was only widened by contact with the conquered. Therefore General
Fytche's words describing King Mindon are all the more impressive:
"Doubtless one of the most enlightened monarchs that has ever sat on the
Burmese throne.[50] He is polished in his manner, has considerable knowledge of
the affairs of state and the history and the statistics of his own and other
countries. In personal character he is amiable and kind and, according to his
light, religious."[51]
King Mindon transferred the
capital from Ava to Mandalay, the last royal capital before the British
annexation of the whole of Myanmar in 1886. In the early years of his reign,
Mindon strove to improve monastic discipline. Although a system of official
investigation of complaints relating to bhikkhus' misdemeanours existed, each
king had to take his own initiative in re-establishing order in the
Sangha.
Mindon found that the
attitude of many members of the Sangha to their code of conduct was exceedingly
lax. He therefore wanted all bhikkhus of his dominions to take a vow of
obedience to the Vinaya rules in front of a Buddha image. He consulted the
Sangharaja who convened an assembly of mahatheras, the Thudhamma Council. As
opinions regarding the vow differed, the primate's disciple, Pannasami, had to
deliver a religious address in support of the king's views. He reasoned that
vows were also taken by the bhikkhus at the time of ordination and that if the
king sincerely desired to improve the discipline in the Order, he should be
supported. All agreed, and the vow was prescribed.
The greatest challenge King
Mindon had to face as a Buddhist monarch was undoubtedly his duty to look after
the spiritual welfare of his subjects not only in his own dominions, but also
in the parts of Myanmar occupied by the British. Moreover, he and many of the
leading sayadaws of his court were increasingly aware that the British were
only waiting for an occasion to annex the whole of Myanmar. Mindon's army
clearly would not be able to stand up to the might of the Indian colonial
government. Therefore, it was not only important to support religious
activities in the occupied territories but it was also essential to prepare the
religion for the time when it would have to survive without the support of a
Buddhist monarch.
The British had made it clear
at the outset that they would not take over the traditional role of the Myanmar
kings, that of protector of the Sasana. The new masters' religion,
Christianity, rapidly gained influence through the missionary schools. The
schools were popular because their education provided much assistance in
securing a job and favour with the colonisers. Christian religious education
was a compulsory part of their curriculum.
After the conquest of Lower
Myanmar, many bhikkhus had fled north in order to remain within the
jurisdiction of the Myanmar kings. Many monasteries in British Myanmar were
left without an incumbent and whole villages were therefore bereft of the
opportunity to receive religious and general education. King Mindon, aware of
this situation, tried to convince bhikkhus to return to Lower Myanmar in order
to serve their people. The king's efforts proved successful and many bhikkhus
returned to their places of origin. But soon it became clear that without the
king's ecclesiastic officials to control the discipline of the Sangha, many
bhikkhus developed a careless attitude towards their code of discipline.
The Okpo Sayadaw, from Okpo
between Yangon and Pago, had stopped many bhikkhus on their way to Upper
Myanmar when the movements of bhikkhus out of the conquered territories was at
its peak around 1855. He assembled the bhikkhus around himself teaching that
the Sangha needed no protection from the secular power if it observed the rules
of the Vinaya strictly. His monastery was the birth place of a movement of
strict monastic discipline. He also emphasised that mental volition was what
really mattered in the religion of the Buddha and that acts of worship done
with an impure intention were worthless. He obviously felt that much of the
Buddhist practice had become a ritual and that the essence had been lost. In
addition to this, however, his movement also challenged the authority of the
king's Council of Sayadaws, the leaders of the unified Thudhamma sect, when he
declared their ordination was invalid due to a technicality. As a result, he
took the higher ordination anew together with his followers.
The Okpo Sayadaw was not the
only critic of the Thudhamma sayadaws. In Upper Myanmar, the Ngettwin Sayadaw
criticised many religious practices and maintained that a radical reassesment
of religious teachings was necessary. The Ngettwin Sayadaw was also a source of
inspiration for the Okpo Sayadaw and other reformers. He had been the teacher
of Mindon's chief queen and had also advised the king on many occasions.
Interestingly, he was a driving force in a movement in Upper Myanmar that
wanted to return to the fundamentals of the religion, but more radically than
the Okpo Sayadaw. The Ngettwin Sayadaw, together with many other bhikkhus, left
the royal city and went to live in the forest near Sagaing. He started to
preach that meditation was essential for all bhikkhus and he required an
aspirant to novicehood to prove that he had practised meditation before he
would ordain him. All the bhikkhus around him had to spend a period of the day
in meditation and he emphasised that meditation was of much greater importance
than learning. He advised lay people to stop making offerings of flowers,
fruits, and candles to Buddha images, but to meditate regularly on the Uposatha
days. Of course, his instructions that offerings to Buddha images were
fruitless and merely dirtied the places of worship, caused considerable unhappiness
with the traditional Thudhamma Council and presumably with many ordinary
people. However, the Ngettwin Sayadaw never strove to form a different sect by
holding a separate ordination as did the Okpo Sayadaw. His reforms were within
the community and within a Buddhist society that was presided over by a king.
The Okpo Sayadaw had no place for royalty in his view of the world and did not
hesitate to confront the system that was still alive, though obviously
doomed.
Two other important sayadaws
of King Mindon's reign deserve mention: the Shwegyin Sayadaw and the Thingazar
Sayadaw. The Shwegyin Sayadawalso tried to reform the Sangha and his movement
is still very much alive and highly respected in Myanmar today. He had studied
under the Okpo Sayadaw, but when he returned to his native Shwegyin near Shwebo
in Upper Myanmar, he avoided controversy in never rebelling against the
Thudhamma Council. He introduced two new rules for his bhikkhus, that they must
not chew betel and consume tobacco after noon. He also maintained that the
Sangha must regulate itself without help from the authority, but he never
doubted the validity of the traditional ordination ceremony.
The Thingazar Sayadaw was one
of the most popular of the great sayadaws of his time. He was also part of the
movement to return to the basics of the teachings and greatly emphasised the
importance of practice as opposed to mere scholarship. Though he was greatly
honoured by the king and made a member of the Thudhamma Council, he preferred
spending long periods in solitude in the forest. In the numerous monasteries
built for him by the royal family and the nobility of the country, he insisted
on the practice of the purest of conduct in accordance with the Vinaya.
However, he did not involve himself in disputes with the extreme reformers or
the Thudhamma council. He became very popular through the humorous tales he
told in sermons preached in his frequent travels up and down the
country.[52]
King Mindon had no easy task.
One section of the Sangha was pressing for far reaching reforms, yet it was the
king's duty to maintain a certain continuity of the traditional ways for the
benefit of the people in general. What complicated the situation was the fact
that the Sangha of Lower Myanmar felt more and more independent of the Buddhist
monarch and his Thudhamma council of senior mahatheras. This is illustrated
graphically by the Okpo Sayadaw's declaration that the Sangha needed no
regulation by the worldly power. This view gained popularity also in Upper Myanmar.
Luckily, King Mindon's devotion to Buddhism was genuine and he was not deterred
by the difficulties confronting him. He was determined not to allow the Sangha
to split into factions that were openly opposing each other. This he achieved
to some extent through careful diplomacy and through the calling of a great
Synod, a Sangayana, in the royal city of Mandalay.
The Sangayana, or Buddhist
Council, is the most important function of the Buddhist religion. The first
Sangayana was held during the first Rains Retreat after the Parinibbana of the
Buddha; the texts to be regarded as authentic were determined at this time.
There had been three more Sangayanas since, according to the Theravada
tradition. The council convened by the great Emperor Asoka, whose missionaries
brought Buddhism to Myanmar, probably provided the most inspiration for Mindon.
The Fourth Council, the one prior to Mindon's council, was held in Sri Lanka in
the first century BC, at the Aluvihara near Matale, for the purpose of writing
down the Tipitaka, which up to that time had been passed on orally.
King Mindon himself presided
over the Fifth Buddhist Council, during which all the canonical texts were
recited and the correct form was established from among any variant readings.
The task took more than three years to accomplish, from 1868 to 1871. When the
bhikkhus had completed their great project, the king had all of the Buddhist
scriptures, the Tipitaka, engraved on 729 marble slabs. The slabs were then
housed each in a separate small pagoda about three meters high with a roof to
protect the inscriptions from the elements. The small shrines were built around
a central pagoda, the Kutho-daw Pagoda, the Pagoda of the Noble Merit. To
commemorate the great council, King Mindon crowned the Shwedagon Pagoda in
Yangon with a new Hti or spire.
The Fifth Buddhist Council
and the crowning of the Shwedagon Pagoda reminded all the people of Myanmar of
the importance of their religion, as well as of the fact that the king and the
Thudhamma Council of senior monks were still the guardians of the Sasana. The
authority of the Thudhamma Council was greatly enhanced also in Lower Myanmar
through the synod. Although the British had not allowed King Mindon to attend
the raising of the new spire onto the Shwedagon, the crowning was a symbol of
the religious unity of Myanmar which persisted in spite of the British
occupation. The religion was also later to become the rallying point for the
Myanmar nationalists who fought for independence from the colonisers.
King Mindon's reign produced
a number of scholarly works as well as translations from the Pali. Neyyadhamma,
the royal preceptor, himself wrote a sub-commentary on the Majjhima Nikaya,
which had been translated by one of his disciples under his guidance. A
commentary in Myanmar on the Pali Jatakas was composed by Medhavivamsa and the
compiler of the Sasanavamsa, Pannasami, put his name to a great number of
works. One of the queens of King Mindon requested Pannasami to write the
Silakatha and the Upayakatha. His teacher asked him to compose the
Voharatthabheda, Vivadavinicchaya, Nagarajuppattikatha. He also wrote a
commentary on Aggavamsa's Saddaniti. Whether all these works were composed by
Pannasami or whether they were composed under his supervision and control is
difficult to assess. It is interesting to note that a majority of his works
were composed in Pali, which was no doubt an attempt to encourage bhikkhus not
to forgo Pali scholarship now that Myanmar translations were readily available.
The calling of a great Buddhist council to purify the scriptures was part of
this movement towards the revival of the study of the original texts.
During King Mindon's reign
bhikkhus from Sri Lanka came to Mandalay on several occasions to solve
difficult questions of Vinaya and to receive the bhikkhu ordination in Myanmar.
After Mindon's death in 1877, his son Thibaw ascended the throne. He was weak
and of feeble intellect, and his reign was short. In 1886, he lost his kingdom
to the British empire and was exiled to India.
With the complete annexation
of Myanmar by the British, an historical era came to an end. Theravada Buddhism
developed in Myanmar over more than two millennia. The visits of the Buddha
were the first brief illuminations in a country that was shrouded in darkness.
The worship of the Buddha that is thought to have resulted from these visits
and from the arrival of the hair relics, may have been merely part of a nature
religion. The pure religion could not endure for long in a country which was yet
on the brink of civilisation. Later, however, the teachings of the Buddha were
brought repeatedly to those lands by various people.
The visits of the Arahats
sent out after Emperor Asoka's council are historically more acceptable than
the visits of the Buddha. Their teachings were understood and perpetuated
possibly in Indian settlements along the coast and later in communities of
people from central Asia such as the Pyu. Through their contact with India,
these cultural centres of the Pyu and Mon could remain in contact with
Buddhism. At first the important centres of Theravada Buddhism were in northern
India and later in South India and then Sri Lanka. Through repeated contact
with orthodox bhikkhus abroad, the understanding of Buddhism grew ever stronger
in the minds of the people of Myanmar. The religion was distorted dozens of
times through ignorance and carelessness, but someone always appeared to
correct the teachings with the help of the mainstays of the Sasana abroad.
Gradually the role was reversed: instead of travelling abroad for advice, the
bhikkhus of Myanmar became the guardians of Theravada Buddhist teaching and
their authority was respected by all. Eventually, when Theravada Buddhism had
long been lost to India and its future was uncertain in Sri Lanka, it found a
secure home in Southeast Asia, especially in Myanmar.
Notes
1. The Mon are also called
Talaing, but this term is considered to be derogatory. It is thought to come
form Telugu, a language of South Indian origin whose script the Mon
adopted. [Go back]
2. G.E. Harvey, History of
Burma (London 1925; reprint 1967) pp. 5, 6. [Go back]
3. Translated by B.C. Law,
The History of the Buddha's Religion (London 1952), pp. 40 ff. [Go back]
4. Bhikkhu is the term
applied to a fully ordained member of the Buddha's Order. [Go back]
5. Identified as Okkalapa
near Yangon. Some believe it to be modern Orissa (Utkala) on the east coast of
India. [Go back]
6. Shway Yoe, The Burman (reprint:
Scotland 1989), pp. 179f. [Go back]
7. Punnovada Sutta, Majjhima
Nikaya I,267ff.; Theragatha, v. 70, Theragatha Atthakatha I,156ff. [Go
back]
8. See entry 'Punna' in G.P.
Malalasekera, A Dictionary of Pali Proper Names (PTS 1937-38). [Go back]
9. The Sasanavamsa says the
Buddha stayed for seven weeks and converted eighty-four thousand beings to the
Dhamma. [Go back]
10. Ashin Dhammacara,
Kyaungdawya zedidaw thamain (Yangon 1978), pp. 28, 29. [Go back]
11. Harvey, History of Burma,
p. 268. [Go back]
12. The Mahavamsa (reprint:
London: PTS, 1980), p. 82. [Go back]
13. Kamboja, a country
referred to by Emperor Asoka in his inscriptions, is generally believed to be
to the west of India. It could, however, also be identical with the Cambodia of
today, and it is conceivable that two Kambojas existed. [Go back]
14. Smith, Asoka's alleged
mission to Pegu (Indian Antiquary, xxxiv, 1905), pp. 185-86. [Go back]
15. Eliot, Hinduism and
Buddhism, I, p. 32. [Go back]
16. Mentioned in several
places in the Manorathapurani, the commentary to the Anguttara Nikaya. [Go
back]
17. Cf. L.P. Briggs,
Dvaravati, the most ancient kingdom of Siam (JAOS, 65, 1945), p. 98. [Go back]
18. Parker, Burma with
special reference to the relations with China (Rangoon 1893), p. 12. [Go
back]
19. For a detailed treatment
of Mahayana Buddhism in Pagan, see G.H. Luce, Old Burma Early Pagan (New York,
1969), I, p. 184ff. [Go back]
20. Ibid, I, p. 14. [Go
back]
21. Cf. Maha-ummagga-jataka,
No.546, The Jatakas (reprint: PTS, 1973), p. 156. [Go back]
22. Cf. Wickremasinghe,
Epigraphica Zeylan., I, pp. 242-55. [Go back]
23. Culavamsa, ch.60, vv.
4-8. [Go back]
24. Luce, Old Burma Early
Pagan, I, p. 79 [Go back]
25. Cf. D.K. Barua, Buddha
Gaya Temple, Its History (Buddha Gaya, 1981), pp. 59, 62, 63, 163, 176, 195,
244-247. [Go back]
26. Cf. Than Tun, Essays on
the History and Buddhism of Burma (Arran, 1988), pp. 85ff. [Go back]
27. Cf. Luce, Old Burma Early
Pagan, I, p. 74. [Go back]
28. Cf. Than Tun, op.
cit. [Go back]
29. The Myanmar word for
Chinese to this day is teyou or tarou which is derived from "Turk," for
the Mongols are ethnic Turks. [Go back]
30. G.E. Harvey, History of
Burma, p. 70. [Go back]
31. History of the Buddha's
Religion, p. 74. [Go back]
32. Pali Literature of Burma
(reprint: London, 1966), p. 14 [Go back]
33. K.R. Norman, Pali
Literature (Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, 1983), p. 164. [Go back]
34. Ven. A.P. Buddhadatta, in
his Corrections to Geiger's Mahavamsa and Other Papers, offers an argument that
there were in fact two Chapatas and that the one called Saddhammajotipala, who
wrote on the Abhidhamma, probably dates from the late fifteenth century. The
Sasanavamsa mentions a contemporary second Chapata who was a shameless
bhikkhu. [Go back]
35. Pitaka-thamain, p.
37. [Go back]
36. See History of the
Buddha's Religion, p. 95 [Go back]
37. Ibid, pp.
102-104. [Go back]
38. Kalyani inscription,
Epigraphica Birmanica, Vol. III#, Pt. 2, pp. 220-21. [Go back]
39. Ibid, p. 249. [Go
back]
40. A bhikkhu who kills a
human being, has sexual relations, falsely claims to have attained superhuman
achievements, or steals automatically ceases to be a bhikkhu and therefore even
a layman can take his robes away. [Go back]
41. The forty-four Myanmar
bhikkhus were ordained in Sri Lanka in a water sima, a place of ordination
floating on the water, on the Kalyani river. The first ordination hall built by
Dhammazedi near Pegu was therefore called the Kalyani Sima and the Sinhalese
ordination the Kalyani ordination. Ibid, p. 249. [Go back]
42. Niharranjan Ray,
Theravada Buddhism in Burma, p. 212. [Go back]
43. Sangharaja is a position
created by the king. The holder of the title is appointed by the monarch. It is
the highest position as far as influence at the court is concerned as the king
will consult the Sangharaja in most religious matters. The Sangharaja was
usually assisted in his duty by a body (similar to a cabinet) of other senior
bhikkhus also chosen by the monarch. [Go back]
44. For more information on
his work, see Bode, Pali Literature of Burma, pp. 79-82. [Go back]
45. Bhikkhus of differing
linguistic background used to communicate in Pali. Even today a visiting Thai
bhikkhu will speak with his Burmese brethren in the language of the
scriptures. [Go back]
46. The Ramannadesa is Lower
Myanmar, the Mon country. [Go back]
47. For a full discussion of
the relation between the Tha-tha-na-wun-tha-lin-ga-ya-kyan and Pannasami's
Sasanavamsa, see Victor B. Lieberman, A New Look at the Sasanavamsa (S.O.A.S
Bulletin, Vol. 39, 1976), Pt. 1, p. 137. [Go back]
48. In the political struggle
for independence the bhikkhus of Myanmar played a significant role. Political
activity is, of course, not normally admissible for a bhikkhu. However, as the
British administration had failed to fulfil its duties towards Buddhism and the
religion was in decline, the bhikkhus felt they had to oppose the government in
order to save their culture. When the government suddenly wanted to
re-establish authority to keep the bhikkhus in their monasteries, their effort
lacked credibility and authority and was not heeded. The colonial government
had to resort to imprisoning bhikkhus in ordinary civilian prisons, but it was
too late to break the movement of civil disobedience of the young activists,
including the bhikkhus. [Go back]
49. In times of peace kings
would use a eulogistic formula instead of giving the order for execution, like
"I do not want to see his face ever again." In times of war the
orders were clearer. Sometimes even bhikkhus were executed. Mahadhammarajadhipati
(1733-52), for instance, executed the Sangharaja and a Brahman because an
important Buddha image was stolen. See The Glass Palace Chronicles (Hmannan I,
376). [Go back]
50. It was the considered
policy of the Indian colonial government to portray the Myanmar kings as cruel
villains. It annexed Upper Myanmar under the pretext of liberating a people who
were oppressed by an ineffective government, much in the fashion of the Soviets
liberating Eastern Europe and Afghanistan. After the annexation of Upper Myanmar,
British publications describing the excesses of King Thibaw's court and the
relief of the liberated people amounted to a propaganda campaign. [Go
back]
51. Fytche, A. Burma, Past
and Present (London, 1878). [Go back]
52. Cf. Maung Htin Aung,
Burmese Monk's Tales (New York & London, 1966). [Go back]
1.[Go back]
Select Bibliography
Original Sources
Glass Palace Chronicle.
Partly translated by U Pe Maung Tin and G.H. Luce: Glass Palace Chronicle of
the Kings of Burma. Oxford University Press 1923.
Cerre, P.H. and F. Thomas.
Pagan, Chronique du Palais de Christal. Editions Findakly. France 1987.
Sasanavamsa. Translated by
B.C. Law: The History of the Buddha's Religion. London 1952.
Recueil des Inscription du
Siam. Part II. G. Coedes.
Mahavamsa. Translated by
Wilhelm Geiger. London: PTS, 1912. Reprint 1980.
Culavamsa. Translated by
Wilhelm Geiger. London: PTS, 1929. Reprint 1973.
Dipavamsa. Translated by
Hermann Oldenberg. Reprint: New Delhi 1982.
Secondary Sources
Barua, Beni Madhab. Asoka and
His Inscriptions. Reprint: Calcutta 1968.
Barua, D.K. Buddha Gaya
Temple: Its History. Buddha Gaya 1981.
Bechert, Heinz. Buddhismus,
Staat und Gesellschaft. 3 vols. Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, 1973.
Bode, Mabel Haynes. The Pali
Literature of Burma. Reprint: London 1966.
Collis, Maurice. The Land of
the Great Image. Reprint: Bristol 1946.
Eliot, (Sir) Charles N. E.
Hinduism and Buddhism: An Historical Sketch. 3 vols. London 1921. Reprint 1957.
See especially Vol. III, "Buddhism Outside India."
Edwardes, Michael. A Life of
the Buddha. London 1959.
Fytche, A. Burma, Past and
Present. 2 vols. London 1878.
Halliday, R.S. The Talaings.
Rangoon 1917.
Law, Bimala Churn. A History
of Pali Literature. 2 vols. Reprint: Delhi 1983.
Luce, Gordon H. Old Burma,
Early Pagan. 3 vols. New York 1969-70.
Maung Htin Aung. Burmese
Monk's Tales. New York and London 1966.
Maung Htin Aung. The Stricken
Peacock. The Hague 1965.
Niharranjan, Ray. Theravada
Buddhism in Burma. University of Calcutta 1946.
Norman, K.R. Pali Literature.
Wiesbaden: Otto Harrassowitz, 1983.
Phayre, A.P. History of
Burma. London. 1883-84. Reprint 1967.
Than Tun. Essays on the
History and Buddhism of Burma. Arran 1988.
Thomas, E.J. The Life of the
Buddha As History and Legend. London 1949.
Shway Yoe (G. Scott). The
Burman. Reprint: Scotland 1989.
Stargardt, Janice. The
Ancient Pyu of Burma. Vol. I. Cambridge 1990.
Periodicals
Annual Report of the
Archeological Survey of Burma.
Bulletin de l'cole Franaise
d' Extreme Orient.
Epigraphia Birmanica.
Journal of the Royal Asiatic
Society.
Journal of the Burma Research
Society.
Journal of the Pali Text
Society.
Journal of the School of
Oriental and African Studies (London University).
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